Immigrants In The Jungle

626 Words2 Pages

The lives of the working class and immigrants in the late 1900's, which The Jungle is set in, is described with hardship because they worked day and night for the bare minimum. This sparked many philosophies and people to support how workers are treated and how much they earn. The most affected by this were the immigrants that didn't know how to speak english at all. They were exploited and easily tricked out of their valuables and sometimes became homeless. The hardships of the immigrants and working class in The Jungle portray the difficulty of people of the time. During the arrival of immigrants in the U.S., there were a lot of people who couldn't find a job because they couldn’t speak english. Men that immigrated usually would try to find someone who speaks their language and english so that they could either teach them or work with them. Women ,that were also not bilingual, would walk around the town looking for a job all day, some couldn't find one. The women who couldn't find jobs became prostitutes to get the money they needed. Their employer would "let them run up debts" until there was no way they could pay it off and when they would try to leave, their employer would threaten them and since they didn't know any better, continued to work as a prostitute and became …show more content…

One of them is the philosophy of anarchism. Anarchism is "an evolving set of attitudes and ideas that can apply to a wide range of social, economic, and political theories, practices, movements, and traditions" and has impacted the way some see the government and their political ideas. The reason this philosophy had grown to be so popular is because it was tied in with the lives of many of the working class gave them hope that one day no one would have to worry about the hardships they went through on a daily basis.(Jun) This inspired people to help change happen to their economy and get what they needed to

Open Document