Propaganda In Upton Sinclair's The Jungle

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Pages: 1

Though society boasts and utilizes many varied methods of attention-grasping, shocking and hatred-brewing propaganda most effectively accomplishes its goal of manipulating opinions. Take, for example, Upton Sinclair's horrifying depiction of a meat-packing factory from his novel, The Jungle. There he details the alarmingly wide range of morbid factory positions, repeatedly mentioning their risks of infection and terrible physiological tolls. In effect, the United States later passed legislation taking control over the conditions of such factories. Sinclair's employment of raw negativity and the macabre drove his propaganda into a successful reformation in the United States. And the key to his success lay in discussing the universally despised