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The Jungle
First Edition| ©2005 Upton Sinclair; Edited with an Introduction by Christopher Phelps
Upton Sinclair’s novel The Jungle, which inspired passage in 1906 of the Pure Food and Drug Act and the Meat Inspection Act, stands as a classic of twentieth-century American literature and social protest. In this accessible and thorough edition by Christopher Phelps, a critical introduction
Upton Sinclair’s novel The Jungle, which inspired passage in 1906 of the Pure Food and Drug Act and the Meat Inspection Act, stands as a classic of twentieth-century American literature and social protest. In this accessible and thorough edition by Christopher Phelps, a critical introduction addresses the wide range of issues raised by the text, including early twentieth-century working conditions, immigrant community, race and gender, political reform, and the continuing relevance of Sinclair’s investigation. This edition uses the most widely recognized text of The Jungle — the Doubleday, Page edition published in 1906 — and provides an illuminating supporting document: President Theodore Roosevelt’s delivery to Congress of the official report that confirmed The Jungle’s shocking allegations about the Chicago meatpacking industry. Questions for consideration, a chronology, and a selected bibliography help contextualize Sinclair’s novel and provide students with resources for further study.
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Upton Sinclair’s novel The Jungle, which inspired passage in 1906 of the Pure Food and Drug Act and the Meat Inspection Act, stands as a classic of twentieth-century American literature and social protest. In this accessible and thorough edition by Christopher Phelps, a critical introduction addresses the wide range of issues raised by the text, including early twentieth-century working conditions, immigrant community, race and gender, political reform, and the continuing relevance of Sinclair’s investigation. This edition uses the most widely recognized text of The Jungle — the Doubleday, Page edition published in 1906 — and provides an illuminating supporting document: President Theodore Roosevelt’s delivery to Congress of the official report that confirmed The Jungle’s shocking allegations about the Chicago meatpacking industry. Questions for consideration, a chronology, and a selected bibliography help contextualize Sinclair’s novel and provide students with resources for further study.
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The Jungle
First Edition| ©2005
Upton Sinclair; Edited with an Introduction by Christopher Phelps
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The Jungle
First Edition| 2005
Upton Sinclair; Edited with an Introduction by Christopher Phelps
Table of Contents
Contents Foreword
Preface
A Note about the Text
PART ONE Introduction: Upton Sinclair and the Social Novel Into The Jungle Muckraking and Reform in the Progressive Era The Politics of Socialism and Labor The Novel as Social History: Immigration, Ethnicity, Gender, and Race in The Jungle The Jungle as Literature Upton Sinclair and the Legacy of The Jungle Is It Still True?
PART TWO The Jungle
PART THREE Related Document
Charles P. Neill and James Bronson Reynolds, Conditions in Chicago Stock Yards, June 4, 1906
Appendixes
An Upton Sinclair Chronology (1878–1968)
Questions for Consideration
Selected Bibliography
Index
Preface
A Note about the Text
PART ONE Introduction: Upton Sinclair and the Social Novel Into The Jungle Muckraking and Reform in the Progressive Era The Politics of Socialism and Labor The Novel as Social History: Immigration, Ethnicity, Gender, and Race in The Jungle The Jungle as Literature Upton Sinclair and the Legacy of The Jungle Is It Still True?
PART TWO The Jungle
PART THREE Related Document
Charles P. Neill and James Bronson Reynolds, Conditions in Chicago Stock Yards, June 4, 1906
Appendixes
An Upton Sinclair Chronology (1878–1968)
Questions for Consideration
Selected Bibliography
Index

The Jungle
First Edition| 2005
Upton Sinclair; Edited with an Introduction by Christopher Phelps
Authors

Upton Sinclair

Christopher Phelps
Christopher Phelps is associate professor of American Studies at the University of Nottingham in England. A specialist in twentieth-century American intellectual and political history, he is author of Young Sidney Hook: Marxist and Pragmatist (1997) and edited and introduced Max Shachtman's Race and Revolution for Verso (2003). He has twice received the Fulbright Award: in 2000 to teach American philosophy and intellectual history in Hungary, and in 2004-2005 to serve as Distinguished Chair in American Studies for Poland. He has written articles and reviews for many periodicals, including Times Higher Education, The Chronicle of Higher Education, New Politics, and The Nation.

The Jungle
First Edition| 2005
Upton Sinclair; Edited with an Introduction by Christopher Phelps
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