Study Guide to The Jungle by Upton Sinclair
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Study Guide to The Jungle by Upton Sinclair

Intelligent Education

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Study Guide to The Jungle by Upton Sinclair

Intelligent Education

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A comprehensive study guide offering in-depth explanation, essay, and test prep for Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle, a novel portraying the harsh conditions and exploitation of immigrants in major US cities in the early twentieth century. As a novel of the turn of the twentieth century, The Jungle reflects not only the American scene of Sinclair's young manhood but also many of his own life circumstances. It becomes important to view the novel in terms of both his life and his times. Moreover, Sinclair’s journalistic background provided him with the opportunity to expose corruption in business and government. This Bright Notes Study Guide explores the context and history of Sinclair’s classic work, helping students to thoroughly explore the reasons it has stood the literary test of time. Each Bright Notes Study Guide contains: - Introductions to the Author and the Work
- Character Summaries
- Plot Guides
- Section and Chapter Overviews
- Test Essay and Study Q&As The Bright Notes Study Guide series offers an in-depth tour of more than 275 classic works of literature, exploring characters, critical commentary, historical background, plots, and themes. This set of study guides encourages readers to dig deeper in their understanding by including essay questions and answers as well as topics for further research.

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Year
2020
ISBN
9781645425199
Subtopic
Study Guides
Edition
1
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INTRODUCTION TO UPTON SINCLAIR
BIOGRAPHY OF UPTON SINCLAIR
UPTON SINCLAIR, THEODORE ROOSEVELT, AND LYNDON JOHNSON
The Jungle reflects not only the American scene of Sinclair’s young manhood but also many of his own life circumstances. It becomes important to view the novel in terms of both his life and his times.
SINCLAIR: BEFORE THE JUNGLE
Sinclair’s early life gave him bitter first-hand knowledge of extreme differences between rich and poor. His father, Upton Senior, came of a long line of Virginia aristocrats but was himself reduced to economic hardship. The novelist’s mother, on the other hand, came from the rising, wealthy Harden family of Maryland. And so Upton Sinclair, Jr., born in Baltimore in 1878, grew up experiencing this strange alternation: after his father’s work took them to New York, the boy would spend most of his time in shabby rooming houses, but he would spend his holidays in the affluent home of his grandfather Harden. He literally shuttled back and forth from cheap food, bedbugs, anxiety over his father’s alcoholism and economic plight, to a lavish diet, wholesome environment, cheerful comfort among the Hardens.
Determined to support himself as soon as possible, Upton Junior began his writing career as a college student. Before he was graduated from the City College of New York in 1897, he had already sold many jokes and stories to newspapers and magazines. By the time he left graduate study at Columbia University in 1900, he had published some ninety stories for boys in Street and Smith pulp magazines like Army and Navy Weekly.
Possibly what turned Sinclair to more serious literature was an unorthodox religious experience. From his friendship with a young Episcopalian minister, Sinclair acquired a passionate devotion to moral and social justice. The Reverend W. W. Moir took the Gospels so seriously that he taught his disciples that a rich man had no chance of going to Heaven. When Moir gave Sinclair some theological works to read, Sinclair found them so contradictory in their reasoning that he lost faith in orthodox religion, but for the rest of his life he did believe in the moral teachings of Jesus. From this point on his writing became highly serious, antimaterialistic, and idealistic.
In 1900, the year of his first marriage, he wrote his first “artistic” novel, Springtime and Harvest, later republished as King Midas. None of his early books - like The Journal of Arthur Stirling (1903) or Prince Hagen (1903) - brought him either the fame or the money he so desperately needed. He and his wife and their infant son David lived for a while in a tent and even spent one fierce winter in a flimsy cabin in the New Jersey woods. But then his second novel, Manassas (1904), which was about the Civil War, led him to the chance of a lifetime.
HISTORY OF THE JUNGLE
Meat Cutters’ strike. In 1904, the Amalgamated Meat Cutters, with 56,000 members, demanded that the “Beef Trust” - Armour, Cudahy, Swift, and other packers - grant a uniform wage to all workers in all their plants throughout the country. The packers responded with an offer of a minimum wage for workers classified as skilled. The union saw this as a trick. They thought the packers would later reclassify many skilled workers as unskilled. In July 1904, packing-house workers struck in nine cities, 20,000 of them in Chicago alone. But the Trust imported strikebreakers and when the union established picket lines, the press reported that “violence flared.” The union soon exhausted its treasury and the strike collapsed.
Upton Sinclair, who had followed the strike carefully in the newspapers, wrote a “manifesto” called “You have lost the strike, and now what are you going to do about it?” Having recently joined the Socialist Party, he sent his essay to the Socialist weekly, Appeal to Reason. It appeared on the front page of the September 17, 1904 edition. And after the editor of the Appeal, Fred D. Warren, had read Manassas, he made a proposal to Sinclair: You have “portrayed the struggle over chattel slavery in America, and now, why not do the same thing for wage slavery?”
Warren advanced five hundred dollars for the serial rights to such a novel. As Sinclair would later tell it in his American Outpost (1932), “I selected the Chicago stockyards as its scene. The recent strike had brought the subject to my thoughts . . . my . . . manifesto had put me in touch with Socialists among the stockyards workers . . . .”
Sinclair’s research in Chicago. On his twenty-sixth birthday, September 20, 1904, Sinclair took a small room in Chicago’s Stockyards Hotel. For seven weeks he observed the life of the “wage slaves of the Beef Trust,” as he called them: “I sat at night in the homes of the workers . . . and they told me their stories . . . and I made notes. In the daytime I would wander about the yards, and my friends would risk their jobs to show me what I wanted to see. I . . . found that by the simple device of carrying a dinner-pail I could go anywhere.”
He also talked with lawyers, doctors, dentists, nurses, policemen, politicians, and real estate agents, and when he was “in doubt about the significance” of his material, he consulted Adolph Smith, Chicago correspondent for the Lancet, the British medical journal. Smith had made extensive studies of abattoirs and packing plants the world over. “These [Chicago plants] are not packing plants at all,” Sinclair quotes Smith as having said; “these are packing-boxes crammed with wage-slaves.”
What Sinclair discovered. Putting all his research together, Sinclair now had this picture of Chicago working-class life: Men, women, and children were forced to work at a furious pace, eleven or more hours a day, in cold, damp, unsanitary conditions, under the artificial stimulus of a “speed-up” system. Employers assumed no serious responsibility for injuries suffered on even the most dangerous jobs. Female employees were sexually harassed by bosses. When workers had organized to seek redress of their grievances, their union had been infiltrated by labor spies; when they had gone out on strike, the packers had used illegal methods to break the strike.
Even more sensational, so far as the welfare of the general public was concerned, were Sinclair’s discoveries about the condition of the meat packed and sold by the Beef Trust. The packers canned diseased meat and even carrion; they used chemicals to doctor spoiled meat; they swept refuse and even rats, rat dung, and rat poison into the meat vats. They duped or bribed the government inspectors who were supposedly on duty to prevent such practices.
Bribing inside the plants was simply a small part of a vast system of political graft and corruption that ruled Chicago. Illiterate immigrants were prematurely naturalized, through their employers’ influence, and paid to vote as directed not once but many times. Public works were under “boss rule”; the police, the packers, and organized crime worked hand-in-hand.
Sinclair’s characters. Sinclair now had his setting and his overall situation. But he could not decide on his specific characters until one Sunday when he happened to stumble on a Lithuanian wedding feast in the back room of a saloon. The bride and groom and their relatives were all recent immigrants who worked in the stockyards and allied industries. The novelist spent eight hours observing their supper and dancing. This scene actually gave Sinclair his opening chapter and many of his characters.
On his last day in Chicago - Election Day, 1904 - Sinclair delivered a speech at a mass meeting in favor of the Socialist candidate, Eugene V. Debs. Later, he would use this speech in the closing chapter of The Jungle.
Writing The Jungle. Back home, Sinclair borrowed a thousand dollars from a clergyman to make the down payment on a Jersey farm with an eight-room house. On the same plot of land he set up an eight-by-ten-foot shack in which he could do his writing.
On Christmas Day, 1904, Sinclair began the novel. “I wrote with tears and anguish,” he tells us in Outpost: “Externally, the story had to do with a family of stockyards workers, but internally it was the story of my own family. Did I wish to know how the poor suffered in the winter time in Chicago? I had only to recall the previous winter in the cabin, when we had only cotton blankets, and had put rugs on top of us, and cowered shivering in our . . . beds. It was the same with hunger, with illness, with fear.”
Ona, as he called the young Lithuanian bride in The Jungle, was modeled on Meta, the novelist’s own wife. “Our little boy was down with pneumonia that winter, and nearly died, and the grief of that went into the book.”
Serialization of The Jungle. Two months later, the first installment appeared in the February 25, 1905 issue of the Appeal to Reason. Published in Girard, Kansas, this four-page sheet devoted its entire first page and much of its inside pages to the opening chapter. The March 4 issue carried no installment because the staff wanted to give new subscribers a chance to catch up on the novel. “As the story unfolds,” the editor promised, “you will be filled with wonder at the simple realism of Comrade Sinclair’s style.” Serialization resumed March 11 and continued until November 4, 1905, when the Appeal announced that the reader could “obtain the balance of the installments” in a “special edition” by simply addressing a post card to the editors.
When Sinclair had completed the manuscript in September 1905, he sent a copy to George Brett, his editor at Macmillan, who had given him a five-hundred-dollar advance after reading the first few chapters. But now Brett wanted “some of the painful details cut out” because, as Sinclair would recall in his introduction to the 1946 edition, “nothing so horrible had ever been published in America - at least not by a respectable concern.” Even the well-known crusading author Lincoln Steffens advised Sinclair to make the cuts. But Sinclair refused and the book was rejected - not only by Macmillan but also by four other publishers.
The Appeal now urged its readers to subsidize the book by ordering copies and paying in advance (a classical method used by Alexander Pope and Dr. Samuel Johnson to finance some of their works). The famous novelist Jack London wrote a rousing “manifesto,” promising that “what Uncle Tom’s Cabin did for black slaves, The Jungle had a large chance to do for the white slaves. . . .” Twelve thousand orders poured in, and the book was set up in type in a special “Sustainer’s Edition.”
Doubleday’s two investigations. At this point, Doubleday, Page and Company offered to publish a commercial edition if they could verify the novel’s “essential truth.” Walter Page sent the galley proofs of The Jungle to James Keeley, managing editor of The Chicago Tribune, who sent back a thirty-two-page report declaring that “everything in the book was false.” Sinclair persuaded Page to send two of his own representatives to Chicago. The first, a lawyer, met a publicity agent at Armour’s, who said smugly: “The Jungle? Oh yes, I know that book. I read the proofs of it, and prepared a thirty-two-page report for James Keeley of the Tribune.”
The second representative, Doubleday editor I. F. Marcosson, reported that The Jungle contained no serious misstatements; if anything, the book was an understatement. “I was able to get a Meat Inspector’s Badge,” Marcosson said, “which gave me access to the secret confines of the meat empire. Day and night I prowled over its foul-smelling domain and I was able to see with my own eyes much that Sinclair had never even heard about.”
On January 27, 1906, The New York Times Book Review noted that the lawyer’s report had upheld Sinclair and so the book would be published on February 15. But on February 17, the Book Review announced a postponement until February 26.
The Times versus the public. Less than a week after the Doubleday edition appeared, the Book Review responded with a full page critique - but on page 128! The critic - anonymous, as was then often the case in reviewing - explained the need for such full treatment. “Inasmuch as Mr. Sinclair’s co-workers in the field of Socialistic propaganda have acclaimed his book as ‘a great book’ . . . it becomes the plain duty of the reviewer to examine The Jungle with a candid and open mind, that its quality as literature and its efficiency as polemic may be fairly appraised.”
While he found the novel “in many ways a brilliant study of the great Chicago industries,” he decided on balance that it failed both as literature and as polemic (see Chapter VI, “Critical Reputation,” for more details). Some libraries put The Jungle on limited circulation because of its “immorality.”
But such negative reactions seem to have been isolated cries drowned out by a general public approval. The New York Evening World - a crusading newspaper more in sympathy with Sinclair’s position - soon declared: “Not since Byron awoke one morning to find himself famous has there been such an example of worldwide celebrity won in a day by a book as has come to Upton Sinclair.” And the famous British novelist, H. G. Wells, on a visit to America, had been asked to look up a young writer believed to be starving in New York. Instead Wells found Sinclair “not merely a wealthy man,” as I. O. Evans has put it, “but the center of the world’s attention.”
Sinclair versus Armour. Meanwhile, J. Ogden Armour spent “three days and nights with his lawyers, avowing his determinatio...

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