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Willie C

Meatpacking - 0 views

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    " Pork packers such as Philip Armour built large plants west of the stockyards, developed ice-cooled rooms so they could pack year round, and introduced steam hoists to elevate carcasses and an overhead assembly line to move them"
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    This source does not go in debth one way or another on the issues of our paper but it provides an extensive background of the rise of the meatpacking industry and how it became a giant industry, which can be used in examining the rise of the meatpackers and how they built up their power.
Emily S

Historical Newspapers - 0 views

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    This article talks about the inspection that will happen in the meat-packing industries. This is the first time that inspection is occurring after workers have already been suffering in the factories for years.
Emily S

What's in your beef? - 0 views

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    There a so many hormones in the cattle produced by lae companies. It is unnatural and cnan lead to side effects in the consumers.
Emily S

Exploitation of fast food addiction - 0 views

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    The powerful fast food industry takes advantage of their obese and addicted clinetel. Fast food has proven to be an addiction. Fast food manipulate their customers like a drug-dealer to a drug add it.
Emily S

Sociology of the treatment of the worker - 0 views

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    This passage reflects the psychology between the manager and the worker. The worker responds to the manager and to the company based on how well they are treated.
Sarah Sch

Eugene V. Debs and American Socialism [ushistory.org] - 0 views

shared by Sarah Sch on 30 Sep 11 - No Cached
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    The article gives historical information about the socialist party in the eary 1900's. Sinclair introduces the concept of socialism in the American public in "The Jungle". Socialism influences the events and how they occur in "The Jungle", therefore historical background of socialism at the time period is important.
Sarah Sch

Digital History - 0 views

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    This website gives historical information on the Great Depression, and its effect on the American people and other countries of the world. The website produces facts and figures from the time period. For example, unemployment during the Great Depression went from less than 3 million in 1929 to 12.5 million in 1932. This source could be used to put "The Grapes of Wrath" into perspective with actually figures.
Sarah Sch

EBSCOhost: Uprooted: The History of Migrant Farming - 0 views

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    The article details the historical background of the migrant workers plight in the Great Depression. 3.5 million people joined the migrant work force in the Dust Bowl. The article also tells of how the over farming led to the desertification of the soil. The article is useful for historical background information on "The Grapes of Wrath".
Willie C

Student Research Center Ronald McDonald hops online - 0 views

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    "In a nation where kid-targeted fast-food spots have been panned as a cause of childhood obesity, there has been much media speculation that the world's most famous spokes-clown was disappearing from McDonald's advertising"
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    This source does not directly take a stance on fast food but it does show how McDonalds is always updating their ad. campaigns to avoid bad publicity and continue marketing to children. This is an example of their terrible business ethics.
Willie C

Student Research Center - powered by EBSCOhost: Upton Sinclair - 0 views

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    "The Jungle (1906), a brutally graphic novel of the Chicago stockyards, aroused great public indignation and led to reform of federal food inspection laws"
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    This shows how the Jungle effected the american public and led to reform of the food industry
Willie C

Dust Bowl - 0 views

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    "when the high price of wheat and the needs of Allied troops encouraged farmers to grow more wheat by plowing and seeding areas in prairie states, such as Kansas, Texas, Oklahoma..."
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    This discusses the cause and effect of the dust bowl for the Grapes of Wrath
Vivas T

Gale Virtual Reference Library - Document - 0 views

  • Just months after publication of The Jungle, federal legislation was passed mandating improved inspection of meat, as well as requiring labels listing the ingredients of canned food products. The legislation had been proposed years earlier, but a combination of business interests resisted it, arguing that it was not the business of the federal government to regulate what people ate. The Jungle demonstratedPage 145  |  Top of Article clearly that people had no way of knowing what was in canned food, and therefore needed government regulation to keep foods safe.
    • Vivas T
       
      This article illustrates the lack of care toward customers both from large businesses as well as the government. "The legislation had been proposed years earlier, but a combination of business interests resisted it, arguing that it was not the business of the federal government to regulate what people ate" portrays the influence large businesses have on the government and also depicts Sinclair's view that the capitalist mindset includes undermining the society, at large, in order to make money for one's self. In addition, this also shows the impact of Sinclair's novel because after its publication, efforts to change the unhygienic and ill production of meat began to actually emerge.
Sarah Sch

The Jungle - 2 views

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    The source decribes the purpose of "The Jungle", along with other topics like socialism, literary significance, and social disparity in "The Jungle". The source tells of Sinclair pursuit in revealing the poor worker's conditions to the public. The source offers insite into Sinclair philosophy and his trials in publishing "The Jungle". ps. username and password= morr36556
Willie C

Fast Food History and Perspective - 0 views

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    "high-pressure marketing promotes junk food that makes everyone fat, resulting from the heartless unloading of unskilled and dangerous work on youthful racial minorities"
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    This article catalogs the evolution of how we eat, and included inside is fast food. This shows how fast food is unhealthy and the corporate companies don't care about anything but money, and the food is not what we think it is.
Willie C

The Jungle Authorial Purpose - 0 views

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    "The novel is remembered largely for its graphic descriptions of rivers bubbling with pollutants, slaughterhouse floors flooded with blood, sick cattle being slaughtered, rat dung being canned with the meat, and, of course, workers falling into boiling vats and being cooked down with the lard"
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    This article argues that the popularity and purpose of The Jungle came from the way Sinclair used vivid description of the meatpacking industries treatment of the workers and their terrible business ethics.
Brian C

fast food liability lawsuits - 0 views

  • Americans spend more money on fast food than on books, movies, videos, records and magazines combined - more than $110 billion in 2000
  • Last July, he filed a class action lawsuit claiming that the fast food industry failed to inform consumers that its products are high in fat, salt, sugar and cholesterol and failed to warn consumers that these ingredients are dangerous to their health.
  • nother class action suit against the fast food industry was filed on behalf of teenaged plaintiffs. This suit claimed that the fast food industry unfairly targets children with toy promotions and child- friendly advertising so as to addict children to fast food at an early age.
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    show how people are beginning to hold fast food companies accountable and are starting to take legal action
Willie C

Grapes of Wrath Themes - 0 views

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    "The Grapes of Wrath is a literary triumph, beautifully and movingly written, artistically interweaving great themes of westward movement, Biblical sacrifice, human courage and endurance, the centrality of the family and of women within the family, the importance of community and human brotherhood, and the evils of selfish individualism"
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    This source discusses the major themes in the Gapes of Wrath the coexist with the major paper themes we are using as well as contributes to them. This quote encompasses them all, which can be picked out for the paper.
Brian C

effect of the jungle linked to fast food nation - 1 views

  • As deregulation diminished governmental standards and inspection, managers have ratcheted up line speeds, increasing the splattering of fecal and stomach matter and spreading food-borne illnesses like E. coli. This deadly threat, described by journalist Eric Schlosser in his popular book Fast Food Nation, is microbial and invisible, but every bit as much a consequence of profit maximization as the unwholesome practices exposed by Sinclair a century ago. If there is a silver lining, it is that this time around the interests of labour and consumers cannot be easily divided. Speed-up and unsanitary working conditions — two critical issues for meat-packing workers — are directly linked to consumers' health concerns.
  • This deadly threat, described by journalist Eric Schlosser in his popular book Fast Food Nation, is microbial and invisible, but every bit as much a consequence of profit maximization as the unwholesome practices exposed by Sinclair a century ago. If there is a silver lining, it is that this time around the interests of labour and consumers cannot be easily divided. Speed-up and unsanitary working conditions — two critical issues for meat-packing workers — are directly linked to consumers' health concerns.
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    shows sinclairs unintended effect on the meatpacking industry, and how fast food nation reinforced this criticism of it
Brian C

the jungle ebscohost - 0 views

  • The brutalization is underscored by Sinclair’s use of numerous analogies that compare the individuals to wild and hunted animals and of parallels between the fate of the innocent livestock and the fate of the common working person. Factory life is variously compared to an inferno, a bubbling cauldron, and a medieval torture chamber, where it is considered good sport to extract the last ounce of flesh from the hapless workers. The factory, however, is only a reflection of society’s disregard for democratic values and its indifference to truth and justice.
  • From the beginning, it is clear to the readers that Jurgis and his family are fighting against the odds. Each new detail makes it abundantly clear that the system tempts people with unrealistic dreams and then erects insurmountable barriers to prevent the attainment of those dreams.
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    Even as Sinclair describes the wedding feast in the opening chapter, he mixes images of gaiety and trays of piping-hot food with vignettes that chronicle the hardships of those forced to work as canners, picklers, beef boners, and general laborers. These workers' tales are tragic, yet the workers refuse to admit defeat. shows the hardship and resolve of workers in the Jungle
Ellen L

Reading "The Grapes of Wrath" in 2010: Immigration, Capitalism and the Histor... - 0 views

  • People usually do not resort to risky and desperate moves unless they have nothing left to lose. Steinbeck begins the Joads’ story with the loss of everything they had
  • Whether as tenants or small landholders, either for subsistence or for markets, the vast majority of the poor migrantes now coming to this country are fleeing the loss of their farms and their livelihoods, just as the Joads
  • As far as capitalism is concerned, whatever will maximize profit is the arrangement that must be pursued, regardless of the human consequences. The situation in Mexico today resembles that of Oklahoma 75 years ago. Small family farms are no longer profitable enough, and people are being thrown off their land every year by the thousands.
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    Interesting perspective comparing the Okies of the 1930s to the Mexicans of today. Covers the capitalism, xenophobia, and enclosure presented to both groups. This article shows the attitude that little has changed over the past century
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