The Jungle: Analysis of Setting
"The Jungle: Analysis of Setting" delves into the various locations that shape the narrative and experiences of the protagonist, Jurgis Rudkus. Set primarily in early twentieth-century Chicago, a city that attracted many Eastern European immigrants seeking jobs in the booming meat-packing industry, the story highlights the stark contrasts of wealth and poverty within a rapidly industrializing society. Packingtown, the grim industrial area where Jurgis works, is characterized by its deplorable living conditions and the oppressive environment of the meat-processing factories, which symbolize the dehumanization of workers.
The narrative also reflects on Jurgis's origins in Lithuania, providing insight into the motivations behind his emigration. Throughout the story, locations like Jurgis’s rundown house, neighborhood saloons, and Bridewell prison each represent different aspects of immigrant life, capturing the struggles and fleeting moments of solace experienced by the characters. Ultimately, these settings serve as a backdrop to the broader themes of exploitation, resilience, and the harsh realities faced by the working poor in early 20th-century America, guiding readers to consider the social and economic consequences of industrialization.
The Jungle: Analysis of Setting
First published: 1906
Type of work: Novel
Type of plot: Social realism
Time of work: Early twentieth century
Asterisk denotes entries on real places.
Places Discussed
*Chicago
*Chicago. Midwestern American city to which many immigrants, mostly eastern European, flocked in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries to find work in the meat-packing industry. A major railroad terminus, Chicago had a brisk economy, but its wealth was unevenly distributed. The captains of industry exploited the workers, who worked under appalling conditions for paltry wages, swelling the owners’ bank accounts.
*Lithuania
*Lithuania. Small eastern European country on the Baltic Sea from which Jurgis Rudkus, the novel’s protagonist, emigrates hoping to find a better life in the United States. Early chapters of the novel contain flashbacks to Jurgis’s life in Lithuania that reflect the environment from which he has come.
Packingtown
Packingtown. Industrial area in Chicago where meat-packing houses are concentrated. Workers in Packingtown typically live nearby in run-down dwellings. Noxious smells from the meat-processing factories fill the air, and Packingtown’s sewers often overflow, sending streams of polluted water into the streets. In one such overflow, Jurgis’s young son drowns.
In 1904, Sinclair gained firsthand experience with such conditions after being sent by a socialist newspaper to investigate Chicago’s stockyards and packinghouses. He spent seven weeks living among workers in the packinghouses, after which he wrote The Jungle. While trying to touch the hearts of Americans, he also touched their stomachs by accurately reporting the deplorable sanitary conditions in meat-processing plants. After President Theodore Roosevelt read The Jungle, he pressured Congress to pass the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906.
After his arrival in Chicago, Jurgis tours Durham’s plant and marvels at the efficiency of the operation and at its assembly-line, not realizing the dehumanizing effects that such efficiency can create. Later, he takes a job in Brown’s meat-packing plant, an assembly-line killing field much like Durham’s. He is assigned to the killing beds, the most dehumanizing place in the packinghouse to work—the place where stunned animals are brought by conveyor belts to be killed and gutted. The killing beds symbolize what the packing-houses do to humans who work in them: They destroy them, killing their spirits, exploiting them, and discarding them when they cease to work up to speed.
Jurgis’s house
Jurgis’s house. House that Jurgis buys for his family. He buys the house thinking it is new, but it is actually only freshly painted after it has been lived in by five other families. To buy the house Jurgis takes out a heavy mortgage but does not understand that his loan requires payment of interest. Like the house’s five previous owners, Jurgis loses the house when he cannot make his payments. Like America generally, the glittering house is a sham that sinks Jurgis’s family deeper into ruin.
Saloons
Saloons. Chicago’s neighborhood saloons provide their customers with both warmth and free lunches that come with their drinks. Many of the hard-working immigrants in Packingtown are also hard-drinking. In winter, when piercing winds howl through Chicago’s streets, workers flood into neighborhood saloons, which represent safe and comforting sanctuaries into which alienated, disenchanted workers can retreat.
Bridewell
Bridewell. Jail in which Jurgis serves a term after being convicted of assault on his foreman, Phil Connor, after learning that Connor is involved with his wife. Later, Jurgis is again sentenced to Bridewell, this time for assault on a bartender who has cheated him. In Bridewell, Jurgis meets Jack Duane, a safecracker who befriends him, paving the way for Jurgis to join the union and involve himself in politics.
Great Plains
Great Plains. After losing his wife, his son, and his home, Jurgis hops a freight train for the tranquility of the plains to assuage his sorrows and reflect on the futility of his life. There he spends a summer moving from place to place, taking whatever jobs he can find. The wholesome rural atmosphere restores him, but after he returns to Chicago, his life reverts to its previous hell.
Union hall
Union hall. Meeting place in which Jurgis finds new direction in his life. During the first union meeting he attends there, he falls asleep when the speaker talks about matters unrelated to his own problems and he is ejected from the hall. The next night, however, when the speaker begins addressing problems of Chicago’s working poor, his speech energizes Jurgis.
Hind’s Hotel
Hind’s Hotel. Chicago hotel in which Jurgis works as a porter. There he comes into contact with socialists and political activists who take rooms there. This job marks another significant turning point in his life.
Bibliography
Bloodworth, William A., Jr. Upton Sinclair. Boston: Twayne, 1977. Portrays Sinclair as a literary rebel who weds art and ideology and sacrifices the last four chapters of The Jungle in his attempt to introduce hope into an otherwise dismal world. Analyzes the novel as a contemporary tragedy, paying attention to the conservative biases inherent in the message.
Harris, Leon. Upton Sinclair: American Rebel. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell, 1975. Depicts Sinclair as the most influential (but not the best) writer in the United States because he changed the way Americans viewed themselves, their rights, and their expectations. Bibliography.
Mookerjee, R. N. Art for Social Justice: The Major Novels of Upton Sinclair. Metuchen, N.J.: The Scarecrow Press, 1988. Argues that Sinclair’s novels must be assessed as an extension of his social activism and desire to communicate with the masses. Examines Sinclair’s use of a documentary style and defends Sinclair’s characterization, noting that in addition to Jurgis, Sinclair manages to give heroic status to both Marija and Elzbieta.
Rideout, Walter B. The Radical Novel in the United States: 1900-1954. New York: Hill & Wang, 1956. After distinguishing between radical fiction and social protest fiction, examines the two major strains of the radical novel. Provides a useful discussion of Sinclair’s place within the radical movement, an analysis of the strengths and weaknesses of his fiction, and useful comparisons to the works of Charles Dickens.
Yoder, Jon A. Upton Sinclair. New York: Frederick Ungar, 1975. Analyzes the reasons Sinclair’s works have been neglected and why Sinclair deemed The Jungle a failure. Explains the underpinnings of Sinclair’s vision of democratic socialism.