The Importance Of The American Dream In Upton Sinclair's The Jungle

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“The American dream” is the phrase that pushed millions to leave their poverty stricken homes in Europe to come to the land of the free. The years of 1890-1914 were a time of vast immigration to U.S. from central and eastern European countries. Many made the journey to this new country on the power of hope, because they believed anything could be better than their horrible lives. In the novel The Jungle by Upton Sinclair, portrays the life of a new immigrant in America. Sinclair wrote the novel to portray the harsh conditions and exploited lives of immigrants in the United States. He puts so much emphasis on how awful an immigrant 's life is that he misses the main aspect of how promising this new world seemed to them. This results in him creating …show more content…

When Jurgis arrives his first priority is to find a job. As he enters a factory he notices “...men and women worked here in the midst of a sickening stench, which caused the visitors to hasten by, gasping” (Sinclair 39). The author wants the reader to know these conditions that all the new Americans had to endure. He describes disgusting scenes at the slaughterhouses and just how unsanitary it all is. Where Sinclair comes up short is how much of an upgrade this is for them. Back in Europe it was a struggle just to find a job let alone one with a steady wage. These immigrants can now provide for their family. No longer do they need to fear where there next meal is going to come from. They could now provide a shelter to keep their families warm, which they could not do back home. It wasn 't easy by all means but America provided jobs, and that was all they were looking for. The slaughterhouse work place could definitely be improved and made safer. But still the step up or the immigrants was so significant that they just pushed the horrors to the back of there …show more content…

In doing so he gets the reader to picture the atrocities he believes the immigrants suffer. Blank dies from being attacked and eaten alive by rats. In reality that is something that would ever really happen. Also Jurgis’s baby dies from drowning in the muck on the side of the street. These are extremes used to overemphasize what really happened. Sinclair uses these ways of death to amplify the terrors and disgust the city had. It becomes more of a fiction work rather than an exact portrayal because these things would never really

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