The Corruption Of Factories In Upton Sinclair's The Jungle

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The Novel The Jungle taking place in 1905–1906, Chicago and Princeton, New Jersey is one that sheds light on the vivid and gruesome working conditions of factories, as the factory age was taking shape in the early 1900’s. The famous journalist and author Upton Sinclair, was one of many who were tagged as “Muckrakers”. The crux of the Muckrakers was to scrape away and expose the dirt and grime that was covering the corrupted system, meat packing factories held during the late years of the great industrialization of the United States. Upton Sinclair exposed the corruption of the factories who in which practiced poor working conditions for their workers in order to maintain a rapid form of production. The novel Upton Sinclair wrote was one to …show more content…
The rise of the factory system took away the need for only skilled artisans and craftsmen, but when the factory system was introduced to big businessmen were introduced to the quick and efficient method of creating and distributing goods. The men who in which owned businesses adopted this method of mass development of products. The name of the game was to hire immigrant workers who had just moved from overseas, some from Ireland due to the great potato famine leaving people hungry, many other seeking religious freedom, and were seeking jobs in order to pay for their families and make a living in the land of the free and the home of the brave. With this aspect added to the game the owners dropped the skilled workers who developed products in a slow manner that required more precise work, but with time the end product was perfect with no flaws or issues regarding workers. Skilled workers were required to be paid more, as no one else possessed the skills they did to make the products owners wanted