Rubyfruit Jungle

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    Ever wonder what the world would be like with even less rainforests or possibly none at all? Well, if tropical rainforest deforestation doesn’t lessen then the world will soon find out. The rainforests are being cut down at an immensely dangerous rate and little to nothing is being done to grow the forests back up again. The rainforests are being destroyed and the impact of it is beginning to become awfully serious. Human beings must start using the rainforests more sustainably and efficiently…

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    Duke Schultz, born Arthur Flegenhiemer in 1902, was a very notable American East coast gangster who was remarkably successful during and after the prohibition era. Schultz successfully carved out his own chunk of success in the violent New York organized crime world by being even more ruthless and violent than any competitors. Schultz helped shape the culture at the time but also was very much shaped by the culture that he worked his way to the top of. He was a very successful European jew in an…

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    The Jungle, being one of many of Upton Sinclair's novels, was published in 1906. This novel was created based on Sinclair's experience in the meatpacking industry where he learned of the life of the stockyard workers and the structure of the business. As he learned and experienced the detail of the work he found that industrialization had unhealthy standards and from the social aspect it became a public outcry. His book, The Jungle had made a social impact but did not exactly got his point…

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    The Jungle by Upton Sinclair depicts the horrors and hardships faced by immigrants and the working class during the industrial revolution.Sinclair focuses on the working conditions of employees of a meat factory. These struggles with working conditions and disease are considered quite inhumane by modern standards. The new spike in demand for goods across America during the industrial revolution created factories, which dehumanised workers in an effort to increase profits. Sinclair describes the…

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    In this chapter the author talks about the life in the U.S. in the early 1900s. The struggles poor families had faced. The chapter talks about how meat factories back then, had a lot of irregularities in the work place. How employees didn't followed any sanitate rules. Factories back then didn't provide tools for the employees. Also according to the chapter “ There was no place for the men to wash their hands before they ate their dinner, and so they made a practice of washing them in the water…

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    Lord Of The Flies Setting

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    The novel “Lord of the flies” obviously takes place in a jungle and in Foster ideology he writes that the jungle and all in the jungle means more to the story than we first read. One of the examples I visuals more is when the boys climb up a mountain, in the novel the author say “They were high up..” After climbing the mountain the boys realized…

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    recognition of his 1904 novel, The Jungle “I aimed for the public's heart, and by accident I hit the stomach instead”. A socialist, and muckraker railed for public outcry of labor equity. He launched a consumer movement through the midst of a harsh stockyard strike from unfairly payed wage workers, socialist writer Upton Sinclair visited Chicago’s “Packing town” region which contributed to copious array of material that later turned into his best-selling novel, The Jungle. This book details the…

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    Jurgis The Jungle

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    The Jungle was a book I was wary to read at first. With the depressing theme growing tiring, it was hard to get through this book properly. It was somewhat enjoyable in some chapters, and in others it was drab. It was probably the most dreary book I’ve read yet. It was a strenuous task to get through the entire thing in one sitting ; it wasn’t read in one sitting, I had to keep putting the book down. From the way the book starts out, it is painfully obvious that Jurgis’s family’s journey will…

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    The chapter on “USDA Government Inspected” showed the implementation and development of the Meat Inspection Act. There was a shock that shattered the calm with the publication of Upton Sinclair’s “The Jungle” (Davidson & Lytle, 2005, p. 235). The discontent of the time was the greed of big businesses. Concern centered on how the meat packing industry operated and distributed the meats for consumption. “Sinclair told of men in cooking rooms who fell into vats and, after being cooked for days,…

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    The Jungle acknowledges the exploited life of the immigrant community through Jurgis and his family, as they come into the United States ignorant of system. Like most immigrants, Jurgis and his family came into the country, more specifically Packingtown, with the words “American Dream” written across their forehead. The family settles into a home with hidden expenses, quickly scamming Jurgis and any other members who were forced to find a job in order to maintain the home. Antanas, Jurgis’s…

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