
The Jungle [1906/2018] – β β β β β
βThe opposite of poverty is not wealth, the opposite of poverty is enoughβ (Dr. Wess Stafford).
βSometimes even to live is an act of courageβ (Seneca).
This graphic novel is based on a classic novel by Upton Sinclair The Jungle [1906] that tells of a Lithuanian family of immigrants who arrive to Chicago, Illinois in 1899 and find their hopes slowly turning to dust as they all take jobs exploiting them and their desperate need to survive in the foreign country. Jurgis Rudkus is a twenty-one year old man eager to work at any job in America and soon finds himself in a meat-processing factory, working in very unhygienic and even horrifying environment. His fiancΓ©e Ona starts working in packaging, while her cousin Marija begins painting cans, and even Jurgisβs elderly father tries to land some job in order not to be dependent on others, among other family members. This family comprising of three generations is soon hit very hard by the βhidden costsβ of their American Dream, which becomes very hard to bear, especially when most factories close in winter and the mercilessness of the familyβs employers and landlords leads to traumatic experiences. Though I have not yet read the original novel by Sinclair, I found this graphic adaptation deeply moving, offering an uncomfortable, yet valuable insight into Sinclairβs vision and the conditions of blue-collar workers in early twentieth-century Chicago.
Continue reading “Review: The Jungle by Upton Sinclair/Kristina Gehrmann”