a more modern city. The novel, The Jungle, by Upton Sinclair, is known as a good example of the societal problems caused by immigration. Due to immigration, opportunities for jobs became hard to find. In the early 1900s bosses hired a large number of immigrants, because they were so desperate for money that they would work for any amount of money. They ignored the dangers, paygrade, and no benefits, just to keep their jobs and earn a few cents. In The Jungle, Jurgis’s family move to America to…
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Forde 20 May 2014 American Literature Period B Balance of Power Upton Sinclair’s novel The Jungle, published in 1906, brought to life to promote the riches of life under socialism where people owned and worked the earth in harmony. Exposing the life of an immigrant worker in a Chicago meatpacking plant that shocked the entire nation to the safety and labor practices in the rapidly growing business in a new nation of immigrants. “Socialism was the proper vehicle for righting the ills of mankind…
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Upton Sinclair was a writer who had not received much recognition before the publication of his novel The Jungle. However, this book propelled him to a prominent position in the literary world. The story portrayed the appalling and unhygienic working conditions that prevailed in the meat industry in Chicago. It exposed how the workers would frequently fall into the machines used for processing meat and end up becoming a part of the meat itself. The Jungle's publication created a massive uproar among…
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statements in the 20th century by Upton Sinclair during the Industrial Revolution. The Jungle written by a socialist called Upton Sinclair. He took the book to the major publishers, but he was rejected because it was too shocking and depressing, so Upton Sinclair published it himself. He wrote “The Jungle” to raise sympathy for the fight of the workers being exploited by the capitalist system in the late 19th and early 20th centuries in the United States, focusing in on immigrants. He was trying to sway them…
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The publication of Upton Sinclair’s 1906 novel The Jungle produced an immediate and powerful effect on Americans and on federal policy, but Sinclair had hoped to achieve a very different result. At the time he began working on the novel, he had completed his studies at Columbia University and was trying to develop a career as an author. He had been born in Baltimore in 1878, but his family had moved to the Bronx in 1888. Though he came from a prominent family, his own parents had little money, and…
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The Jungle America’s current society and working class take for granted some of the regularities and laws put into place to provide and safe and non-hostile work environment. Throughout reading the novel The Jungle by Upton Sinclair, you get to picture a possible real life experience of the hardships and road blocks of an immigrant family attempting to achieve the American dream. Things such as poor working conditions, the availability of jobs, overcoming sickness, and finding shelter to provide…
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two Lithuanian immigrants who recently arrived in Chicago, to marry. Their courageous new beginning symbolizes the explore of immigrants in America. The idea that America provides a new beginning for those that work hard and yield the hope to succeed. The author struck the idea that rebuts the idea of America and the…
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Upton Sinclair's involvement with socialism, this led to a writing assignment about the plight of workers in the meatpacking industry, eventually resulting in the best-selling novel The Jungle. Despite Sinclair's intention to reveal the plight of laborers at the meatpacking plants, his image of it was so clear of the cruelty to animals and unsanitary conditions there caused great public outcry and ultimately changed the way people shopped for food. Fame and fortune would not swerve Sinclair from…
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hours laws, legal guarantees for workers’ rights to organize and join unions, prohibition of child labor, Social Security, unemployment compensation, and fair labor standards. For all of the New Deal’s limitations, its laws and programs tamed Upton Sinclair’s “Jungle,” encouraged broad economic security and prosperity, and created, in economic terms, the most equitable America in history. And it was promoted and protected not only by strong unions but also by religious leaders, thanks to the prominence…
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SS8 Unit 1, Part 1 Maturing of an Industrial Society: Second Half of the 19th Century A) Problems and progress in American politics 1) New problems created a changing role of government and the political system 2) Scandals, economic depressions, limitations of traditional politics resulted in reluctant change a) Civil Service replaced the Spoil System after the death of President Garfield b) misuse of government funds…
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