During the end of The Gilded Age, technology and innovation, expanded, and the United States were thought of as becoming a growing empire. With this growing empire came a lot of changes, trends and differences in opinions. Theodore Roosevelt, Ida M. Tarbell, and Upton Sinclair, sat down to discuss the continuing problems that started with the Gilded Age.
Theodore Roosevelt was an astounding opinion leader and was someone people considered to be the prominent head of the Progressive Era. He discussed with Ida M Tarbell, and Upton Sinclair about his frustrations towards the land’s resources “So many people of this country blindly believe that our resources are inexhaustible, but they would be incorrect in believing so. ” he would say, “With the growth of technology, the resources The United States needs is far too great and harmful for our Nation.”
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Tarbell, fueled with anger on this whole topic, would slam her book on the table. “While we are on the topic of national resources, ” she would exclaim, “The coal-oil business is primarily owned by Mr. Rockefeller, a robber baron himself.” She would then proceed to discuss his unethical, cheating, and deliberate rigging of railroad prices and other distrustful practices against competitors in the oil trade.
Upton Sinclair would be hanging on the edge of his seat eating up every word, waiting for his turn to talk. He would then slam his Journal, The Jungle, on the table. “- And while we are on the topic of horrible and unethical practices of the rich man taking advantage of the poor, lets discuss the conditions of the working man in the meat industry.” He continued to discuss the gruesome, shocking, and awful treatments that the men had to deal with on a daily, reading an excerpt from his article, “Let a man so much as scrape his finger pushing a truck in the pickle rooms, and he might have a sore that would put him out of the world; all the joints in his fingers might be eaten by the acid, one by
Tarbell, fueled with anger on this whole topic, would slam her book on the table. “While we are on the topic of national resources, ” she would exclaim, “The coal-oil business is primarily owned by Mr. Rockefeller, a robber baron himself.” She would then proceed to discuss his unethical, cheating, and deliberate rigging of railroad prices and other distrustful practices against competitors in the oil trade. Upton Sinclair would be hanging on the edge of his seat eating up every word, waiting for his turn to talk. He would then slam his Journal, The Jungle, on the table.
Upton Sinclair was part of the group of people who wanted to improve the meat packing industry. He started to protest after going to investigate the Chicago Packingtown strike. Upton’s investigation led him to find that there were poor working conditions, and poor sanitation in the factory. There was diseased and rotten meat, and later, it was found that there was chemicals that are harmful to humans put into the meat. Also, it was found that many products were mislabeled.
The thesis of this review mainly consists of the issue with the school use of Upton Sinclairs’s “The Jungle”. The relevance with the book is that within this review there is a negative critique on how it is described to the students in the classroom. The author of this review, Louise Carroll Wade, argues that teachers have been kind to Sinclair. She explains that this novel was made to “call attention to the plight of Chicago packinghouse workers who had just lost a strike against the Beef Trust”. Also, she express her idea of how scholars have uncritically accepted Upton Sinclair's descriptions of the terrifying working and unsanitary conditions of the Chicago meat packing industry in 'The Jungle”, where in reality it was more skeptical.
New Spirits: Americans in the Gilded Age, 1865-1905 written by Rebecca Edwards provides readers with many different individual accounts to illustrate the transformative time of America during the Gilded Age. The work shows the cultural, social, political and economical elements of the age that aided in forming the America we have today. Edwards’s purpose in writing New Spirits is to offer readers new insights on the era by eliminating predetermined stereotypes one may have established before reading the work. Edwards wants readers to put aside their prior knowledge to understand just what it was like to live in the Gilded Age by providing readers with the consequences and achievements of people during the time.
A transition from cottage industries to new manufacturing processes in the early 1800’s caused a significant uproar in America’s Literature. As Capitalism grew, many socialist authors wrote novels to address the situation. As a result, readers argued whether the author wrote these novels for money, to discuss the situation, or to simply expose capitalism and shock the reader. An initial reading of The Jungle by Upton Sinclair might appear to be literary fiction, further analysis suggest that it is primarily a work of commercial fiction. Upton Sinclair effectively uses extended-metaphors to explain the cruelty the people at the time had to go through.
Rough Draft Since the publication of The Jungle back in 1906, it remains a very impacting novel in American history. While it may not have any ghouls or goblins, The Jungle is miles past a horror story. In what is arguably Sinclair’s best work, he vividly depicts the terrors of life in the meatpacking industry, and the barbarous working conditions that come along with it. This novel illustrates the different ways the industrialization process destroys the lives of workers by bombarding them both physically and emotionally with: deplorable working conditions, harsh weather, and government corruption. Through the view of Sinclair’s fictional character Jurgis, he uncovers all of the lies and corruption that was masqueraded by capitalism, and he
In “The Jungle”, Upton Sinclair depends upon the use of pathos through imagery to portray the theme of the dehumanizing evils of meat industry. To Appeal to the unaware American consumers about the process of meat process and the harsh way the workers are treated, the author includes in his excerpt, “There would be meat that had tumbled out on the floor, in the dirt and sawdust, where the workers had tramped and spit uncounted billions of consumption germs.” Sinclair doesn’t want people to pass through his message unnoticed, through his carefully picked imagery, he wants them to imagine the life visually to make a change. Through his quote, “tumbled out on the floor in the dirt and sawdust” he is expressing how the workers who are working
Factories, transcontinental railroads lines, new and robust cities, vast agricultural marks the lands. This was the growth in America, the beginning of the gilded age. With the quick and very effective economic growth and wealth of course, brought issues in society. America’s extraordinary economic development was produced multiple job opportunities. Labor increased from 13 million to 19 billion people.
Although it may seem that the meat packing industry is still in turmoil because of their unwillingness to make known what foods have Genetically Modified organisms present, the meat packing industry was much worse during the 1900’s because of the unsafe working conditions, and uncleanliness of the food. Body 1: The meat packing industry’s working conditions were much worse in the 1900’s than they are today. In the novel The Jungle, by Upton Sinclair, working conditions were horrible for immigrants who were employed in these factories. People in these factories were worked very hard and used up till they could not work anymore. In the novel Jurgis broke his ankle because of the unsafe
During the 1900’s working conditions were undeniably horrible. In Packingtown everyday got more difficult as the days went on. In the meat packing business things were supposed to be done quick. Inside the factories packing, chopping, inspecting and people actions didn’t mix. Not only did the people in the factories suffered, the people outside of the factory also suffered.
Franklin Roosevelt was a very influential and important president in American history who had an immense impact on the American economy and social policy during the 1930’s and 40’s and throughout the future of America, he also shared some ideas with the author John Steinbeck. He idolized Theodore Roosevelt, and took great inspiration from him. He has served as president for longer than any other president in history, serving for three terms instead of the usual two that is generally accepted as the maximum amount of time that a president can serve. He drove America out of the great depression and through the second world war.
Despite the fact that slavery ended, race relations in the Gilded age were in poor condition. In most aspects of public life, African Americans had been allowed to make little progress from 1870-1900. This fact directly influenced progressive age activists, such as W.E.B DuBois, in their efforts to advance their lives socially and politically. The Gilded age is define as the time between about 1870 and 1900.
Thus, Sinclair’s purpose of writing The Jungle failed to bring readers to advocate for the rights of workers trapped in the low wages, unsafe working conditions, and long hours of meatpacking factories, but rather, succeeded in opening the country’s eyes to the meatpacking practices that went on behind closed doors and the establishment administrations to protect the public from these unscrupulous
Allan M. Winkler’s Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Making of Modern America talks and narrates the life about one of the most famous presidents that the United States had, Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Born into a family with a lot of wealth and power, Franklin D. Roosevelt led the country through two of its greatest confrontations, the Great Depression and the World War ll. Allan Winkler locus in Roosevelt’s missteps and achievements and immerses readers in the personal and political sides of one of the most important figures in the history of the United States. Allan Winkler describes very strong the infancy and the academic achievements of Franklin. His parents James and Sara Roosevelt gave him the best education with tutors at home.
Camila Casanova U.S. History 1302: S67 Mr. Isaac G. Pietrzak February 9, 2018 Critical Review: The Jungle Sinclair, Upton. The Jungle. New York: Barnes & Noble Classics, 2003.