Sinclair demonstrates Jurgis living the horrors of the meatpacking, and living the immigrants experience plus the disillusion of coming to the state. One important factor behind America’s astonishing economic growth in the late nineteenth century was the increasing exploitations of its industrial workers. The industrial working conditions in the late nineteenth century were often extremely hazardous, safeguards around machinery were inadequate. As the result, thousands of workers were injured or even killed in industrial accidents each year. Sinclair makes use of grotesque description of the food and the factory though the novel, also he describes the bizarre accidents done to workers, who lose body parts, get cut themselves and get skin infections (Sparknotes.com). The novel also illustrates a crude image of the immigrant’s experiences and suffrages. In Sinclair’s book, the Rudkus family first arrives full of hope for the prosperity of their life, but with the process of the book, all their dreams are crushed as well as their life. Their dreams are replaced by the struggle of surviving, they are exploited as labors, sold into prostitution, and are use as cogs in the capitalist machines (Shmoop.com). Immigrants faced great hardship arriving to the country, they were usually poor and were