The Jungle---just the title alone puts a perfect picture of flourishing foliage into the minds of everyone who has heard its name. One would imagine an adventurous tale behind the cover‚ full of exotic animals‚ exciting journeys‚ and perhaps a singing blue bear befriending an ambitious boy named Mowgli. However‚ the story behind the cover is anything but musical or exciting. To be frank‚ every line of literature will make you contemplate about becoming a vegetarian‚ and here’s why. The Jungle‚ written
Premium Upton Sinclair The Jungle The Jungle Book
Stubbles Deep within the Chocolah Jungle lies a community of chimpanzees. The first time the small chimp Lulu opened her eyes and looked up‚ she saw her smiling mother. Her short brown hair was swaying in the soft breeze. Next to her mother was her father smiling as well but‚ with a hint of sadness in his eyes. She reached up her tiny hand already curious about the cause of his troubled look. She was distracted by a whoop of a chimp swinging past in the trees and barely caught a glimpse of its
Premium Chimpanzee Father Family
The White House was bombarded with mail calling for reform of the meat-packing industry after The Jungle was published‚ and after reading The Jungle‚ President Roosevelt invited Sinclair to the White House to discuss it. The president then appointed a special commission to investigate Chicago’s slaughterhouses. Although TR did not like Sinclair due to his Socialist views
Premium Employment Industrial Revolution United States
ARCHETYPAL SETTINGS 1. The River – Almost any source of water will focus on the importance of life. Without water there is no life. A journey on or down a river is often a metaphor for life’s journey or a character’s journey‚ especially if the river is shown as a road or means of travel – pulling or pushing a character through changes. (Twain’s Huck Finn) Rivers can also be a metaphor for the passage of time (Big Fish) or the stages of a human life (creek‚ roaring river‚ sea; or the crossing of
Premium Garden
Grasshopper Jungle By: Andrew Smith A raunchy and bizarre story of two boys trying to discover themselves in a world filled with giant grasshoppers. The Grasshopper Jungle by Andrew Smith is a fantastic horror/science fiction book. The Grasshopper Jungle had me on the edge of my seat at all the right times. This is the story of Austin Szerba a punk rock and history junky and Robby Brees a very confused teenage boy‚ best friends who are out to discover who they are. Austin and Robby both live in
Premium English-language films Muckraker Fiction
Closing Argument Gentlemen of the jury‚ we have gathered to decide the fate of a boy‚ a life or death decision. This is a responsibility that must not be taken lightly‚ a guilty child born into a corrupt system shouldn’t be culled due to the ignorance and failure to achieve the justice he deserves. This boy‚ who is in good health‚ and should live to a good age‚ will come to a permanent end. In my many years of law it has never been clearer to me the suspect has been falsely accused. It is your duty
Premium Crime Capital punishment Murder
heard this saying before whether it is in the sports world‚ in school‚ at work‚ or maybe even at home. The lesson taught is to show teamwork and care for the benefit of one’s teammates. Ideally this lesson will work out‚ though in Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle the saying is proved to false. Taking place in a capitalist society‚ the novel depicts the polar treatment of individuals during this time. The wealthy few would benefit from the hard and dangerous work of the poor many; while the wealthy would also
Premium The A-Team Member of Parliament Team
Factories could produce rapidly‚ which meant prices greatly decreased. Immigrants came in large numbers in hopes of starting new lives‚ but most encountered harsh working conditions accompanied by a few rights. In 1906 Upton Sinclair published The Jungle‚ a novel about the meat packing industry; this novel describes the horrors of a young immigrant named Jurgis Rudkus who came to America seeking freedom and opportunity‚ yet he was met with poverty and dangerous working environments
Premium Capitalism Industrial Revolution Trade union
Running Head: IMPRESSIONS OF THE JUNGLE FROM A SOCIAL JUSTICE PERSPECTIVE Impressions of the Jungle From a Social Justice Perspective The Jungle by Upton Sinclair Sherree Boyce Lehman College Author Note This paper was prepared for Social Welfare Institutions and Program‚ SWK‚ 639‚ Section 81‚ taught by Professor Yvonne Johnson The novel‚ The Jungle by Upton Sinclair depicts the lives of poor immigrants in the United States during the early 1900’s. Sinclair is extremely
Premium Maslow's hierarchy of needs
some wolves did not thought so‚ they always believed that “What have the free people to do with a man’s cub?” (Kipling 1909‚ 16). No one could look between his eyes in the jungle‚ not even Shere Khan. His eyes were a major indication of the humanness in him. ‘He has eyes that make the jungle people afraid’. In The Second Jungle Book‚ we are told that “And yet the look in his eyes was always gentle. Even when he fought‚ his eyes never blazed as Bagheera’s did” (Kipling 1895‚ 286). In every situation
Premium The Jungle Book Rudyard Kipling The Second Jungle Book