What Was Upton Sinclair's Accidental Muckraking Novel?

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The Accidental Muckraking Novel “I aimed for the public’s heart, and by accident I hit it in the stomach.”
-Upton Sinclair
What is a muckraking novel? Well, a muckraking novel is one that is trying to bring awareness to problems like child labor and improper working conditions. The goal of these novels is to try to bring about change (Alchin). Though The Jungle was not supposed to be a muckraking novel, it became one of the best examples of one. In The Jungle, Upton Sinclair writes about the journey of immigrants in America and about the horrors of the meatpacking industry. Although the book did not achieve exactly what Sinclair wanted, it did lead to the 1906 Meat Inspection Act and the Pure Food and Drug Act (“About The Jungle”). The …show more content…

He supported the statements made in The Jungle by using facts, public figures, and laws. That was one of the techniques he used that made The Jungle a muckraking novel. Sinclair also exposed the problems in the meatpacking industry to try and change the poor working conditions, another thing muckraking novels try to do. Even though it becomes more of a propaganda novel in the end, it differs from a propaganda novel because Sinclair was open to bias (“About The Jungle”).
Another reason why The Jungle is considered a muckraking novel is the change the novel brought. In the book, Sinclair talks about the meatpacking industry and how horrible the working conditions were. He tells about how many men lost fingers, crippled their backs, and were infected with tuberculosis. He says that the men ate where they worked, and there was no soap, water, and sometimes, no toilets. He even goes to explain how the workers would package rotten meat when there was no meat inspector around as well as how some men fell into lard vats.
“men...fell into the vats...till all but the bones of them had gone out to the world as Durham's Pure Leaf …show more content…

President Roosevelt had a special commission check Chicago’s slaughterhouses. The commission's report confirmed almost everything that Sinclair had wrote about. After this, Roosevelt passed the Meat Inspection Act of 1906 which stopped any bad meat from entering the country and also passed the Pure Food and Drug Act which banned the mislabeling of any products. Though Congress did not fix the problems that the workers faced, Sinclair’s book brought about a lot of change in the meatpacking industry and achieved the purpose of a muckraking novel. Though it was not Sinclair’s original intention, the reform it brought was great for working conditions all over America (Costly). The Jungle brought about great change in the American meatpacking industry. Upton Sinclair opened up the eyes of people all over America. His novel became a classic muckraking story that started the reformation of meat in America. Without Sinclair, those horribles things that were going in the packing houses would still be happening. Though Sinclair did not originally intend for all this to happen, the people of America should be grateful to the change his book brought

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