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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
10 pages in length. Social conscience is an admirable goal to which myriad authors aspire when they it comes to exposing accounts of societal wrongdoing, corporate cover-up and blatant deception. Perhaps no one has truly achieved this objective as well as Upton Sinclair in his highly acclaimed The Jungle, a book that uncovers so much previously unreported and reprehensible behavior in the meatpacking industry that is has the distinction of being considered a leader in muckraking journalism. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
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10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCJungle.rtf
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has truly achieved this objective as well as Upton Sinclair in his highly acclaimed The Jungle, a book that uncovers so much previously unreported and reprehensible behavior in the meatpacking
industry that is has the distinction of being considered a leader in muckraking journalism, which is defined as the ability to "search out and publicly expose real or apparent misconduct
of a prominent individual or business" (Merriam Webster PG). II. EXPOSING AN ENTIRE INDUSTRY Sinclairs The Jungle has acquired the status of
a classic novel among passive readers and staunch critics alike. Utilizing Walter R. Fishers Narrative Paradigm Theory, one readily finds that the best-seller has not only had a "tremendous
influence" upon life in America, but historians have come to regard the classic as one of the primary reasons two United States presidents brought forth substantial change concerning the manner
in which meat was handled and inspected in the packing industry, as well as opening once-closed eyes to the plight of the migrant worker.
Presidential power has long cast its influence over various aspects of social, political and economic history. Example of such control is depicted in The Jungle, which based its
premise upon the suffocating wage labor issue. The book painted a grim picture of the manual working class with respect to their overall conditions. Not just men and
women, but children were also compelled to work most unreasonable hours - eleven or more a day - amidst some of the most horrid condition. It was not at
all unusual to find an overabundance of workers crammed into dark, damp and highly unsanitary workhouses, continually forced to produce goods at a faster and faster rate of production.
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