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"The Jungle" by Upton Sinclair
This paper discusses Sinclair's portrait of industrial capitalism, especially the meatpacking industry and European immigrants, in his novel "The Jungle". -- 865 words; MLA

Upton Sinclair's "The Jungle"
This paper analyzes the working conditions in Late 19th and early 20th century America as exemplified in Upton Sinclair's "The Jungle." -- 1,335 words; APA

"The Jungle"
This paper analyzes the book by Upton Sinclair "The Jungle" and the effect the book had on food production laws. -- 884 words;

Upton Sinclair's "The Jungle"
A historical analysis of Upton Sinclair's "The Jungle", published in 1906. -- 900 words;

"The Jungle" and Business Ethics
A review of the business ethics of the packing company described in "The Jungle" by Upton Sinclair under a capitalist system through the philosophy of Martin Friedman. -- 1,150 words;

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THE JUNGLE

"The Jungle is perhaps the most brutal novel ever written in America. It is one long
scream of pain and tragedy" (Cook 117). The novel shows the reader how hard being an
immigrant was in the early 1900s. Immigrants had to take any job they could, even if that
meant working in the packing plants, which Upton Sinclair shows in the novel. Jurgis
Radix is the main character. Jurgis and his family move to America searching for a better
life. Jurgis works in a packing plant and is continuously loosing his job. Halfway
through the book, Jurgis' wife dies trying to give birth. The rest of the novel shows the
reader Jurgis's hardships with his jobs and life. The novel, The Jungle depicts the
horrors of meatpacking in the early 1900's, and helps push the government for stronger
sanitation laws.
The conditions in the meatpacking plants were so terrible that several men would died on
the job. The things that were in the meat that the public ate were so revolting that
Sinclair found it a need to write about it. Sausage meat would be shipped to Europe and
be rejected and sent back to the U.S. By the time it reached the U.S., the sausage would
be moldy and white, and then it would be "dosed with borax and glycerin, dumped into
hoppers, and then made over again for public consumption " (Grall 1). 
Rats were nuisances, and the packers would put poisoned bread out for them, then they
would die, and then the rats, bread, and meat would go into the hoppers together. The
meat then would be shoveled into carts and the man doing the shoveling would not trouble
to lift out even one rat if he saw it. "There were things that went into the sausage in
comparison with which a poisoned rat was a tidbit" (Aryes 2). Hundreds of tons of meat
would be stored in huge piles in rooms, and the water from leaky roofs would drip over
it. Thousands of rats would race about on it. "It was too dark in these storage areas to
see well, but a man could run his hand over these piles of meat and seep off handfuls of
the dried dung rats" (Aryes 2).
A person in Packingtown said that, "they use everything in the pig except the squeal"
(Frakes 111). Hams that were spoiled "with and odor so bad a man could hardly bear to be
in the room with them" (Frakes 111) were pumped full of a strong pickle to destroy the
odor, then sold to the public. Sinclair wrote of a case where a physician made the
discovery of steer carcasses that were condemned as tubercular by government inspectors,
therefore contained ptomaine's, which are deadly poisons, were carted away to be sold in
the city. Another case told about a whole spoiled ham that was spoiled and was cut up by
the two-thousand-revolutions-a-minute flyers, and mixed up with half a ton of other meat.
"No odor was in a ham could make any difference" (Aryes 1). Meatpackers would
accidentally drop the meat onto the floor, in the dirt and sawdust, where the workers
tramped and split uncounted billions of consumption germs.
Under the rigid economy which the packers enforced, some jobs only required that it only
be paid to do once in a long time, and among these jobs was the cleaning out of the waste
barrels. Every spring they did it; and in the barrels would be dirt, rust, old nails, and
stale water. Cart load after cart load of this stuff would be taken up and dumped into
the hoppers with fresh meat, and sent out to the public's breakfast.
Sinclair told about the enormous stockyards Chicago had; 
"two hundred and fifty miles of track within the yards. The stockyard brought about ten
thousand heads of cattle every day, and as many hogs, and half as many sheep, which meant
some eight or ten million live creatures turned into food every year. There was over a
square mile of space in the yards, and more than half of it was occupied by cattle pens;
north and south as far as the eye can reach there stretches a sea of pens. And they were
filled, so many cattle no one had ever dreamed existed in the world. Red cattle, black,
white, and yellow cattle; old cattle and young cattle; great bellowing bulls and little
calves not an hour born; meek-eyed milch cows and fierce, long-horned Texas steers"
(32-33). 
It would have taken all day just to count all of the pens. Groups of cattle would be
driven to the chutes, which were roadways about fifteen feet wide, raised high about the
pens. In these chutes the stream of animals was continuous. It was quite uncanny to watch
them, pressing on to their fate, all unsuspicious, "a very river of death" (33). Sinclair
describes the way in which hogs were killed: "They had chains which they fastened about
the leg of the nearest hog, and the other end of the chain they hooked into one of the
rings upon the wheel. So, as the wheel turned, a hog was suddenly jerked off his feet and
borne aloft. At the top of the wheel he was shunted off upon a trolley, and went sailing
down the room" (35). The hogs then went down a line where several workers preformed
different tasks of taking the hogs apart and using them for meat.
The working conditions for the meatpackers were so bad that a worker could be killed or
severely injured. If the worker was severely injured, it could take months for him to
heal, and by that time he would be unemployed. The owners of these plants cared nothing
for their workers. All they cared about was their money. They would do anything for their
money even if that meant not taking care of their workers. Cut backs were made on safety
procedures that injured or even killed the workers. Workers had no place to wash their
hands before they ate dinner, so they made a practice of washing them in the water that
was to be ladled into the sausage. The workers would have to work in freezers were the
meat was to kept to be preserved. Sinclair told of a young boy in a freezer that had
hardly any warm clothes on and his ears where so cold that when they tried to rub them to
get warm one of the young boy's ears fell off. They weren't very well-clothed. They would
catch awful colds and not only that they would have to stand in chemicals ankle deep. A
worker could be cutting something and be startled and slice his hand open. There would be
nothing to put on the wound to help avoid infection or disease.
Sinclair topped off his novel with a final disclosure. He describes tank rooms full of
steam in which men labored on slippery floors processing the meat. Open vats laid upon
the level of the floor, the peculiar trouble of these workers "was they fell into the
vats; and when they were fished out, there was never enough of them left to be worth
exhibiting. Sometimes they would be overlooked for days, till all but the bones of them
had gone out to the world as Anderson's Pure Leaf Lard" (Cook 112)! 
To insure that the meatpacking plants would stay open the owners would do just about
anything. Any inspector who tried to interfere with the system did not last long.
Government inspectors were afraid for their life, so they would lie and pass the meat off
as okay for public consumption. Owners paid up to two thousand dollars a week "hush
money" from the tubercular steers alone. Also, the same with hogs which died of cholera
on the trains, and which you might see them being loaded into box cars and hauled away to
a place called Globe, in Indiana, where they made a fancy lard.
Meat would also be covered up so that they would pass inspection and be able to be sold
in the city. To cover it up the workers would put chemicals in it so that it would cover
up the smell or even to turn the meat color to its original color if it had been moldy or
old.
The Jungle had a wide variety of influences on just about everybody who read the novel.
Sinclair's descriptions of the meat made people "stare with horror at the corned beef on
their dinner tables and promptly write to their congressmen" (Fischer 1). Long before
Sinclair's novel, a good many voters had suspected something was wrong in the Packing
Industry, because hundreds of soldiers had gotten sick on embalmed beef during the
Spanish-American War. Disease had swept the ranks; death rates had soared. It was later
reported, with no exaggeration , "that more American fighting men had been killed off by
the meat packers than by Spanish bullets" (Cook 115). The novel appeared for sale on
February 16, 1905. Having investigated the Chicago packinghouses, Sinclair hoped to
arouse sympathy for the conditions of the workers and promote the cause of socialism, but
in the process he also included graphic description of the filth and poisons that was put
into canned meats. Sinclair was disappointed that the public read The Jungle as an appeal
for food legislation, he later stated, "I aimed at the public's heart and by accident I
hit their stomach" (2). Readers didn't care about the political philosophy imbedded in
his message, what got them was the revolting details about the meat they were eating.
After the release of The Jungle, a parody on a familiar childhood rhyme appeared in the
press. It read: 
"Mary had a little lamb,
And when she saw it sicken, 
She shipped it off to Packingtown,
And now it's labeled chicken" (Cook 116) .
The novel was a best seller and led, partly because President Theodore Roosevelt reacted
to it by setting in motion a government investigation, to federal meat inspection and the
passage of the Pure Food and Drugs Act. Roosevelt read the book. He was horrified at the
books descriptions of the packing houses. Thus, he instructed the Secretary of
Agriculture and a commissioner of the Department of Labor to investigate Sinclair's'
story. The two-commission reported that The Jungle did not misrepresent the deplorable
conditions of the industry" (Miller 5)It wasn't easy to pass the two bills, because the
packing industry kept striking back viciously. The packing industry was able to win some
favorable publicity by printing a series of articles in The Saturday Evening Post saying
that the packing industry only produced the purest and finest of meats. Roosevelt's
inspectors confirmed Sinclair's descriptions so Roosevelt could convince Congress to pass
an act. Roosevelt's investigating commissioners were able to get Mrs. Bloor to help them
get in touch with potential witnesses, who were able to confirm some of Sinclair's
allegations. The bill was quickly passed and signed by the President.
Even though bills were passed, they weren't enforced to the point where it made a huge
difference. It did make a difference but diseased meat was still appearing on the city
markets. The bills did not pierce the thickest skulls and most leathery hearts among the
meat packers, but it had its effect on the American people. Meat sales were cut in half,
because of the bills. "No other American novel, before or since, has produced such fast
action" (Fischer 1). Since 1906, many debates have been made about the specifics of food
and drug regulation, but never any serious suggestion that the two laws should be
repealed.
In conclusion, Sinclair was able to show how meatpacking was hell on earth, and how
revolting some of the meat was that was sent out into the public. The owners of the
meatpacking industries didn't care if anybody got sick or died by eating or preparing the
meat all they cared about was their money. They had so much money that they were able to
pay off inspections just to protect their industry. They would do anything just for their
money. That just goes to show the reader what kind of world this world is turning into, a
greedy one, a world where the inhabitants would do anything to please their needs or
wants. We as a society need to learn how not to be so materialistic and how to respect
other people.
Bibliography
Works Cited
Aryes, Jeff. Conditions in Meatpacking Plants, 1906.
http://galenet.gale.com/a/acp/netacgi/nph-brs?d=DTCU&s1=Condition. Gale Group, 1999
Cook, Fred. The Muckrakers. Doubleday & Company, Inc. 1972
Frakes, Jordan. "Summary." http://www.kirasto.sci.fi/sinclair.htm. 1995
Garraty, John. "101 More Things Every College Graduate Should Know About American
History. American Heritage, December 1987.
Grall, Jessica. "Meat-Packing Horrors." http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/literature/Sinclair.
Sunsite Inc., 1998
Lee, Rick. Upton Sinclair Exposes U.S. Meat-Packing Conditions.
http://galenet.gale.com/a/acp/netacgi/nph-brs?d=DTCU&s1=condition.../index.html&r=4&f=.
Gale Group. 1999
Miller, Ruth. Pure Food & Drug Act & Meat Inspection Act, June 30, 1906.
http://galenet.gale.com/a/acp/netacgi. Gale Group. 1999
Mitchell, Greg. "How Media Politics Was Born." American Heritage, sept/oct 1988.
Sinclair, Upton. The Jungle. New York. Robert Bently Inc., 1946
Yardley, Jonathan. "The Ten Books That Shaped The American Character." American Heritage,
April/May 1985.

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