Worker's Rights in Upton Sinclair's The Jungle

Worker's Rights in Upton Sinclair's The Jungle

Worker's Rights in Upton Sinclair's The Jungle

Worker's Rights in Upton Sinclair's The Jungle

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Overview

Upton Sinclair's work as a muckraking journalist in the early twentieth century led him to investigate and expose the dangerous conditions that immigrants and minority workers faced in manufacturing plants and factories. His novel, which cast these real-world conditions within a fictional setting, was so shocking that five major publishers refused to print his work until 1906. Its eventual publication has an enormous effect on social consciousness, with lawmakers and citizens calling for regulation, safety laws, and worker's rights and protections. This compelling book offers readers a collection of twenty-three essays on the topic of worker's rights as they relate to The Jungle, featuring selections from Winston Churchill, Eric Schlosser, and Christopher Hitchens. The book also covers Sinclair's life and work, initial criticisms of and support for The Jungle, and a discussion of contemporary immigrant and working conditions as they relate to issues within the novel.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780737740677
Publisher: Greenhaven Publishing LLC
Publication date: 05/30/2008
Series: Social Issues in Literature Series
Pages: 224
Sales rank: 1,004,613
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.50(d)
Age Range: 15 - 17 Years

About the Author


B01

Table of Contents


Introduction     11
Chronology     15
Background on Upton Sinclair
The Life of Upton Sinclair   William A. Bloodworth     20
Sinclair Was an Idealist   David Denby     31
Sinclair Was Defeated by the Forces He Attacked   Floyd Dell     41
The Jungle Was Written as a Cry for Social Justice   Upton Sinclair     50
The Jungle and Workers' Rights
The Jungle Depicted the Plight of Immigrant Workers   Jon A. Yoder     57
The Jungle Was Designed to Bolster the Labor Movement   Anthony Arthur     68
Sinclair Distorted Conditions in Packingtown   Louise Carroll Wade     79
The Jungle's Truths Cannot Be Ignored   Winston Churchill     86
Sinclair Was Disappointed by the Impact of The Jungle   Kevin Mattson     92
The Jungle's Realism Undermines Its Socialist Message   Christopher Hitchens     102
Sinclair's Depiction of African American Strikebreakers Is Racist   Mark Noon     111
The Jungle's Conclusion Weakens Sinclair's Message About Workers' Rights   Walter B. Rideout     118
The Jungle Is Still Relevant   Bryan Hayes     126
Upton Sinclair Was Wrong: The American Dream Is Alive TheEconomist     131
Conditions Depicted in The Jungle Are Returning   Eric Schlosser     138
Contemporary Perspectives on Workers' Rights
The United States Must Support Its Poorest Workers   Beth Shulman     149
Labor Unions Must Meet Workers' Needs in a Changing World   James O'Toole   Edward E. Lawler III     162
Immigrants Continue to Work in Dangerous Conditions   Dave Johnson     169
Young Women Are Vulnerable to Sexual Harassment in the Workplace   E. J. Graff     174
Globalization Exploits Child Labor   Sarah Cox     183
Global Workers Must Have a Voice   Lisa Roner     189
Women's Salaries Continue to Lag Behind Men's   Aaron Bernstein     197
Whistleblowers May Be as Fraudulent as the Corporations They Accuse   Alexei Oreskovic     202
For Further Discussion     209
For Further Reading     211
Bibliography     212
Index     216
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