Social Economy In The Jungle, By Upton Sinclair

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The Jungle was written by Upton Sinclair in 1906. The story is set in the early twentieth century and it follows the Lithuanian immigrants of Jurgis Rudkus and his family as they try to live with the difficulties and hazards of working in Chicago’s stockyards. Deceit and corruption followed the family the moment they began their American Dream by the powerful bosses and politicians of the city. However, the main characters believe that through hard work all is possible, and soon the whole family pitches in to create a stable income. They soon discover that they have no allies in America. The unsanitary factories and its low wages endanger and eventually kill off most of Jurgis Rudkus’ family. Because of this, Jurgis Rudkus then loses himself in his grief, which is now intoxicated by liquor and prostitutes. He becomes a beggar, a tramp and even has a role in the criminal warfare of Chicago. Finally, Jurgis Rudkus turns his life around when he becomes an active socialist advocate. The Jungle preaches the idea that a socialist economy is the cure for the corrupted capitalist one that puts power over the well being of its workers. Sinclair’s focus in writing the novel is to depict the struggles of immigrants in a new industry rather than that of immigrants in an urban setting or of American culture. In The Jungle, Jurgis Rudkus flees to rural America but finds out that there is no escape to the economic turmoil when he realizes that the farmers let the workers go after harvest time. This demonstrates the reader that the economic troubles reached out farther than just the major cities of America. Furthermore, the book begins with a typical Lithuanian wedding that took place in Packingtown, a Lithuanian immigrant dense area. This shows ...

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...xtures of rotten meat, saw dust, dead rats and possibly even human body parts and urine. Shortly after reading the excerpts, President Theodore Roosevelt assigned a special commission to investigate Chicago’s slaughterhouses. This eventually resulted in new federal food laws that would maintain the sanitation of canned meat. Yet this reaction was all to Sinclair’s dismay. The public forced action towards the sanitation of the industry but ignored the conditions of the meat industry workers, which is what Sinclair had originally written the book for. Nonetheless, his work did promote the national well being of the nation. Because of the publication of The Jungle, processed and fast food industries are now regularly monitored and inspected for sanitation. Moreover, his book helped develop a small bridge between the two different worlds of Americans and immigrants.

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