The scene I encountered when I read about the meat packaging industry in the early 1900's was very graphic. Some images are more graphical than others. When I thought about the section "Jungle", the first scene I came across was a big iron ring with pigs. This scene is emphasized in my mind, because I can almost see pig screams because their feet are torn by increasingly high air. I also understand that a huge "river" pig is waiting for Turn to be bound by Barry Black.
Sinclair said: "My effort is to find righteousness in the world, to live, and to try to help other people live." Jungle "depicting corruption in the American capitalist society, I use a metaphor for sensory images and naturalism. His purpose is to reveal this corruption and see socialism as light in the dark. The conclusion of "jungle" is optimistic, not only because it represents the ideal socialist world, but also because it shows a complete loss of socialization of people without socialist doctrine.
Although the jungle is a novel, Sinclair uses highly induced details and images to associate a novel with a news item called "Trick or Treat" that was in the 1890s and 1920s. It reached the peak. Muckraking's journalists are aimed at revealing social illegal acts by clearly depicting shocking situations and behaviors, but these authors are not very interested in delicate behavior analysis not. Sinclair's news writing style records the external conditions of immigration control with the accuracy of photos. It is full of detailed contents of packaging cities in this novel, and it seems that Sinclair is depicting the abandoned battlefield, not the place of production of consumer goods. However, people are more affected by emotions than sympathy.
Perhaps related to the growing popularity of the jungle is the enthusiastic use of images by fiction by Sinclair. Sneaky and disgusting explanation of Packing City made Apton Sinclair a famous writer. Sinclair explained his explanation based on the time spent in Chicago and he explained about such a scene: "Unbearable human smell can not bear." "(Sinclair 115) The appeal to all five senses of Sinclair really makes the description very influential, he also said." . Packer will release poison bread (rat); they die, and mice, bread and meat all enter the hopper. "(Sinclair 121) These explanations have opened the eyes of unknown readers even they have continued to consume poison for years, and caused the popularity of the novel