the Progressive Era, many businesses lacked motivation. As long as money was the outcome, factory owners would care less what they were selling to their customers. One of the biggest, and most problematic examples of this was shown in the meatpacking Industry. At the time, journalists played an important role in exposing wrongdoing (Gliderlehrmen). A man named Upton Sinclair was the journalist to expose the meatpacking industry (Wikipedia). He did this through his book, The Jungle. Sinclair's work…
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Before the Progressive Era, meat packing plants were very unsanitary and the meat products were often, if not always contaminated. This was an ongoing problem during this time and could cause problems for both the economy and the public. Progressive Era champions have brought attention to this scandal and made a great effort to lobby for change. Because of this, champions had made great improvements on preventing the manufacture and sale of impure food and drugs during the Progressive Era. One notable…
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rate of consumption, the demand for meat products within the United States is exorbitant, thus causing a need for an industrialized meat packing process. The meatpacking industry within the United States first came under fire in 1906 when Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle was published. His work exposed the inhumane working conditions that were found within the industry to the general public of the United States. Because of this, the FDA called for reformation of the industry, forcing it to have increased…
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History 102 Biography Project: Upton Sinclair Sheila AdjeiMensah Mrs. KellyLuba March 25,2015 Period 6 Sheila AdjeiMensah Mrs.KellyLuba SUPA American History February 18th, 2015 Annotated Bibliography Websites *Denby, D. (2006, August 28). Uppie Redux? The New Yorker. Retrieved March 6, 2015, from http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2006/08/28/uppieredux This online magazine article discusses the triumphs and downfalls of Upton Sinclair. It g…
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rate of consumption, the demand for meat products within the United States is exorbitant, thus causing a need for an industrialized meat packing process. The meatpacking industry within the United States first came under fire in 1906 when Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle was published. His work exposed the inhumane working conditions that were found within the industry to the general public of the United States. Because of this, the FDA called for reformation of the industry, forcing it to have increased…
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During the Progressive Era, the perception of bringing reforms to a national level are showed by the successes that it had by implementing Acts that no longer helped big industries, instead, the middle-class focus to help the working class. Many middle-class progressive reformers were motivated by personal indignation, this feeling was expressed by journalists called muckrakers, this writers, unlike journalist who merely reported events, fed the public taste for scandal and sensation by investigating…
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is was nothing but one gigantic lie” (Sinclair). The lower class were stuck in an endless cycle of poverty, due to the fact that big business eliminated competition, which resulted in unrealistic prices and employees being treated as animals. Upton Sinclair’s belief…
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The Jungle by Upton Sinclair is a literary work describing human nature exposing truths of the wrongs done to people of America and is representative of all workers of the time. It is a very depressing realization of how unregulated capitalists corporations and monopolies treated human beings as wage slaves with complete disregard for the workers well-being. Throughout the book, Sinclair shows the struggles of an American family in order to show the failings in American society. **(A little about…
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“The Jungle” by Upton Sinclair was written during the Progressive Era, 1890-1920, and declared Sinclair as a Progressive writer. Writers like himself sought to bring light to the United States’ economic problems through education, rather than excusing them with Social Darwinism. As the Industrial Revolution ended with a shift in the United States’ economy, workplace conditions adversely got worse while corporations and factory owners gradually became more wealthy. The wealthier the owners, the more…
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impacting the lives of ordinary citizens. The Progressive Era, the New Deal, and World War Two were three scenarios that greatly portrayed this government impact. Each dealt with programs created by the government to lead the United States through any turmoil as well as give citizens a more positive way of life. When President Theodore Roosevelt became president in 1901 he took office with many ideas of reformation. One of his most popular progressive reforms was his full support of the Pure Food…
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