Meatpacking

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    The era of Progressivism was one in which America went through social, political, economic and moral reforms. These changes took days and months to implement with results that benefited the majority of America. People such as Upton Sinclair, Jane Adams and Theodore Roosevelt contributed in various ways to this major reform movement. Local citizens, women's right reformers, and two of our presidents in the 1900’s majorly contributed to the changes and reforms which define the Progressive Era.…

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    Film Analysis: City Of God

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    City of God Analysis The audience is introduced to the favelas of Rio de Janeiro through the eyes of a panicked chicken escaping his own death. Right away, the cinematography and editing of the film is notable. Cidade de Deus (City of God) (Fernando Meirelles, Brazil, 2002) portrays the effects of organized crime in slums of Brazil supported by poverty, crime and drugs. It focuses on how these hardships influence the paths of two young boys. Li’l Dice (Douglas Silva)—later takes on the persona…

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    Analyzing Remy's Rat

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    Remy despite being a rat embodies superior qualities, he is clean, refuses to walk on all fours to avoid soiling food with dirty front paws. Remy’s rat colony comes across as a belonging to a working-class status. Rats live in close quarters near humans but in abject condition under roof and sewers. Rats are dirty and uncouth. They feed on garbage and leftovers and stolen food. They had to be steamed clean and purified before entering the restaurant to prepare food. The subtext embedded…

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    Wilson 1 Heaven Wilson Ms. Sambol AMH 2020 30 March 2015 The Jungle In the year of 1905–1906 America was still trying to “reconstruct” and put everything in line to be a good country. You had American citizens dying including children; you had people in debt working extreme hours and in conditions to pay off. People were living in America supposedly called the “home of the free” to really the home of the worst. In the book “The Jungle” by Upton Sinclair it describes exactly what was going on…

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    The Jungle is novel, written by Upton Sinclair, which focuses on a recently immigrated (from Lithuania) family expecting/hoping for a better life in America. Upton Sinclair was regarded as one of the most renowned muckrakers, in other words, a journalist who exposed the corruptions in either industries or individuals. His writing was during a time of progressivism and reform, where there was an abundance of individuals seeking to improve society and human conditions and dispose of capitalist…

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    During the early 1900s, urbanization brought about many rapidly progressive changes to society and how people lived their lives. With this came many issues, and a plethora of writings were published to expose these hidden downsides. Two of the most prominent of these novels were “The Jungle” by Upton Sinclair, a melancholy and empathetic commentary on the meat-packing industry, and the lives of those who were forced to work in it, and “Silent Springs” by Rachel Carson, which sought to expose the…

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    1) In the past, the meatpacking business is probably one of the most demanded and high-paying jobs where employees are highly skilled. As time passed, the meatpacking business became modernized, in which employees with skill are no longer needed. Follow McDonalds’ footstep, the meatpacking industry started to integrate the factory assemble line in their system and it resulted in the firing of hundreds of workers. With this new system, each worker stood in spot along the line performing the same…

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    Schlosser described a visit to a meatpacking plant somewhere in the High Plains. His journey through the plant was quite sure to his own understanding. There were so many workers standing near another and they are chopping up chunks of cattle, standing in pools of pool that were deep. Workers were killing cattle by hitting them and slicing them up. Even though there are machines to process meat, with cattle there are different sizes that come along with it. Unlike other animals, cattle would…

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    was most known for his account of the meatpacking industry called The Jungle. The Jungle detailed the inhumane conditions workers in the meatpacking industry had to endure. Whether it was subjecting their skin and nails to acid in order to clean the meat or covering spoiled meat with chemicals to hide the rotten smell. Either way Upton Sinclair inspired President Roosevelt to pass the Pure Food and Drug Act and the Meat Inspection Act. While the meatpacking industry was a large obstacle Upton…

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    In chapter three of her book, “Cutting into the Meatpacking Line”, Deborah Fink gave emphasis and expressed importance to gender considerations and divisions as it is stated in “laws, rural culture, in plant management policies, in packing unions, and in everyday life”, (Fink, p. 73). She wanted to center our attention to gender in general, not just about women’s susceptibility to exploitation both socially and economically, but also men’s “vulnerabilities” about their “manhood”, which could…

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