The Jungle is about a family who was from Lithuania, who moved to America to “get rich”. It’s not actually about a real jungle though. The family faces a lot of hardships and problems as when they get to America. In Lithuania they struggle and are very poor. Jurgis friend said that he went to America and got rich. Turns out his friend lied and he was actually poor and struggling too. So Jurgis traveled to America with his father,wife, his wife stepmother,her children, and his brother or cousin. I forgot if it was his brother or cousin. They all go to America with such big dreams and hopes but it all gets shut down when they get there. When they first get there they have to stay in a woman’s crowded house. It was even more crowded now they have arrived. They try to buy a house so they won’t have to be in that house for long. So once they found a house they made a downpayment on it. They did not understand what the mortgage was and about the bills or …show more content…
Everyone was invited as they did in Lithuania. If people would walk by or just happen to look through the door then they would be invited in. They had enough food to feed every one who came. Usually in weddings in Lithuania the guest would give money but most of Jurgis and Ona guest didn’t really give money. All they did was dance to the music that never stopped, dranked up the liquor,until they got drunk, and ate up all the food. The man who was supplying the liquor would fill the container-dispenser- with water or juice once it got to a certain mark so he would not use up all his liquor even though Ona and Jurgis paid for a certain amount. Since Ona,Jurgis, and Teta Elzbieta had borrowed that money from people they needed a way to pay them back. So once they started working,and on top of bills,insurance,and mortgages they had to pay off the debt. All there money was really gone now since they had to pay a lot of money back for such a big
In the book Anthem by Ayn Rand, there are two places, the city and the uncharted forest. While being next to each other, they are both similar and different. There are many examples throughout the book about they are different.
As customary with Lithuanian weddings, guests help pay for the feast by giving what they can since these feasts are expensive,
Upton Sinclair's "The Jungle" is a novel that depicts the lives of Lithuanian immigrants working in the meatpacking industry in Chicago at the turn of the 20th century. The jungle refers to the harsh and unforgiving environment of the meatpacking district, where workers are subjected to dangerous working conditions, unsanitary living quarters, and exploitation by powerful meatpacking companies. The book opens with Jurgis Rudkus, a strong and proud Lithuanian immigrant, arriving in Chicago with his family. They quickly find work in the meatpacking district, but soon discover that the reality of their new life is far harsher than they had imagined.
The Jungle is a widely known book created by Upton Sinclair. Its mainly about a man by the name of Jurgis Rudkus and his family immigrating from Lithuania to Chicago for a better life in the Americas. The family finds a employment in a meat-packing factory. The family quickly realizes their dream becomes into a nightmare and it is not what they hoped for.
Have you ever imagined living through life without a steady job, no money, or no food? Both of the characters in these stories endured all of those things. Jurgis and James had many different experiences and many similar experiences throughout their lifetimes. Upton Sinclair wrote a book, The Jungle, describing a young, late teen’s man named Jurgis Rudkus and his family. His family and he moved to America in the early 1900’s looking for a better life.
What I find interesting is that the people in the book The Jungle by Upton Sinclair who try to comfort other people who are suffering, like the settlement worker who gets Jurgis a job at a steel plant on the outskirts of town after hearing Teta Elzbieta’s horrible family life and then and there is also that doctor working on birth defects, who might have been able to help little Kristoforas Teta Elzbieta three year old son who dies from a sudden illness that he catches from the drafts of their poor little house if they only known that the doctor was looking for patients. But in the Chicago slums there are many more people in need and looking for help than there are people contributing to it. Like Madame Haupt mid wife who Jurgis has to
Jurgis gets news from his cousin who struck rich in America and tell him how wonderful life is. Jurgis then gets a job offer and him and his whole family move to the new world to live a better life. The job offer was nothing more than a scam. Jurgis and Ona frightened now have to find a way in America. Jurgis assures Ona that everything will be okay
Among the Hidden is about a boy named Luke. Luke is what many people called a "shadow child." A shadow child is normally a third or fourth child in the family. these children had to be kept a secret due to a law during this time. The law stated you may not have more than two children, so the population can be kept down.
Which is worse: failing or never trying? That question is the one we all ask ourselves. I think that never try it is worse because you lock yourself in your comfort zone and in the end when not intending it you fail because you lose the opportunity know what will happen, you stay with the doubt and do not know if that could have been the best experience or a great achievement in your life. On the other hand, if you try and fail, you learn and if you learn improvements.
The Jungle is a story that teaches people about the history of the meatpacking industry and how poor the working conditions were. The story follows Jurgis Rudkus and his newlywed wife Ona Lukoszaite; moreso Jurgis’s story and how his life turns out in America. Neither Jurgis nor Ona originated in America. Jurgis seems to go through problem after problem in the story, and that is the theme of the story. The story teaches great history on how the United State’s industries used to be.
When reading a novel about the ideal society you begin think, this often leads to odd thoughts that you would have to share with your family unit if you had lived in this apparently perfect community. Just think about it, no homicide, no robbery, nothing that could possible put you or your assigned (yes, assigned) family in harm 's way, it really makes you ponder upon what you would be losing. But what about what you gain. We would call this place Utopia, a seemingly perfect, yet imagery (emphasis on imaginary) community. I prefer to think of it as a game, the only twist is you are the game creator your task is to keep everybody comfortable and relaxed, but still able to provide for themselves and others.
The Jungle was worte in the 1900s by a man named Upton Sinclair. Upton Sinclair's main theme he wanted his readers to see was: the corruption, problems with immigrants, the hollowness of the American Dream, socialism, and so much more in in America . Even Though, this was just a piece of the handful of problems in America and still gave him the great title of a muckraker, which is someone who exposed the bad things in America. During the novel he gave many points, more than any other theme of just how bad America was with treating immigrants.
Ayn Rand said "The policy of always pronouncing moral judgment does not mean that one must regard oneself as a missionary charged with the responsibility of "saving everyone 's soul". If Equality were to read the short essay that Ayn Rand wrote, Equality would have a different opinion on his plan to take over the council. "No matter how hard the struggle, there is only one choice that a rational man can make in the face of such an alternative. " If equality were to read this he would have to really think, something he would agree with others maybe not so much. With his intention of taking down the structured walls of the society, Equality 7-2521 has to put a long thought process into the action he wants to take If He doesn’t the wall will crumble
There are many other traps around America that deceive the immigrants because their weakness of not knowing English and the desire of getting a great life in America which lead them unpreparedly get fooled by the businessmen. These traps prevented the immigrants from leaving America, because of the significant amount of debt that they have to pay each month, which forced them to keep working and become the slave of this capitalistic society in America. Unfortunately, even they work very hard, in most of the time they will not get anything in return, such that Jurgis’s family cannot even keep the house at the of the book and many of family members’ health destroyed by the harsh working conditions in the
The Fountainhead opposes sentimentalism, and contends that everything worth considering or feeling ought to be the result of reason and rationale, not feeling. At whatever point Roark, Dominique, or Wynand elucidate the amazingness of the individual, they legitimize their positions with sensible contentions as opposed to with enthusiastic interests. The novel regards rationale and reason so much that all that it extols is logical, truthful, and unadulterated. The novel's mathematicians, architects, developers, and representatives are definitely more clever than its wistful scholars and columnists. Roark constructs the greater part of his outlines in light of the least difficult geometrical shapes, for example, triangles or squares.