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The Jungle

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About This Book

The novel follows a recently arrived immigrant family whose hopes for prosperity in an industrial city are crushed by harsh working conditions, exploitation, poverty, and disease. Scenes move from personal celebrations to brutal labor in the meatpacking and stockyard district, revealing unsanitary practices, corrupt employers, and indifferent institutions. As family members confront injury, unemployment, and social marginalization, the narrative exposes systemic injustice and argues for social and political remedies while tracing the human cost of industrial capitalism.

About the Author

Sinclair, Upton portrait

Upton Sinclair

Upton Sinclair (1878-1968) was an American writer and social activist known for his influential works that often critiqued social injustices and the capitalist system. His most famous novel, "The Jungle," exposed the harsh conditions and exploited lives of immigrants in the United States, particularly in the meatpacking industry, leading to significant reforms in food safety regulations. Sinclair's prolific career included over 90 books, spanning various genres, including fiction, non-fiction, and plays. His commitment to social change and progressive politics is evident throughout his body of work, which remains relevant in discussions of labor rights and economic inequality.

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