In Comparison, Nickel and Dimed Versus The Jungle
In Comparison, Nickel and Dimed Versus The Jungle
In Comparison, Nickel and Dimed Versus The Jungle
Harrison Chan
AP English
Ms. Nicholson
10 January 2010
While members of today’s impoverished society face many of the same challenges that
the poverty stricken populace of the early 1900s, their lives are immeasurably better than those
providing a looking glass into the world of the lower classes, barely scratched the surface of the
truly menacing hardships faced by the characters of The Jungle. Instead, the novel dissected the
hardships of modern America, illustrating them in light that seems trivial when compared to the
ailments and injuries that plagued the immigrants of The Jungle. However, themes of human
avarice and cruelty have carried on through the ages to inhabit the personalities of characters of
Barbara Ehrenreich’s goal in writing Nickel and Dimed was to attempt to infiltrate
herself into the American minimum wage society and experience the life of a minimum wage
worker. Ehrenreich sought to recreate the conditions faced by the minimum wage populace and
try to live a “normal” life. She experienced firsthand the aches and pains associated with working
in a low wage workplace, the trials and tribulations of making rent on less than 8 dollars an hour.
At times during her experience, particularly later in the chronology, she became more deeply
involved and interested, letting her emotions dance through her “scientific” separation of
personal life from her “experiment” life. In her last stop, at the Walmart in Minneapolis,
Minnesota, she begins to sow the seeds of rebellion with the tabooed five-letter word. Union.
Upon seeing the hotel workers strike for higher wages when they were already paid more than
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most Walmart “sales associates”, she used the news to encourage her fellow employees to revolt
In 1906, technology had not reached the stage of development that it would a century
later; along with the technology, medical care of the time was far less able. Citizens were
regularly stricken with fevers, infections, and chronic ailments. The more important injuries that
distinguish the difference and difficulties between The Jungle and Nickel and Dimed, however,
are the lives and limbs lost. Not a day went by, that an employee of Durham’s or Brown’s was
not struck down by the grueling work. Bodies were mauled on a daily basis, whether from the
cut of a splitter’s cleaver or from the mass of a full-grown bull dropping off the hoist. In other
places, men and women lost toes and parts of their feet from the strong acids they worked in.
Still other factories poisoned their employees with toxic fumes and dusts every day. Nearly a
century later, at the beginning of the next millennia, regulations and safety has improved vastly.
While workers still suffer regular pains and aches, they are neither as ghastly nor as imminently
life-threatening as those of 100 years ago. The ailments that strike most of today’s workers seem
trivial when compared to the loss of life and limb faced by the lowest working class of 1906. The
employees of today’s lowest working class are stricken, instead, with chronic aches and pains
that last a long time, but are, ordinarily, less debilitating than the strong fevers, dismemberment,
Through the ages, human nature has changed little. While humans went through various
Sinclair’s and Ehrenreich’s work, humans, particularly humans with power or authority, are
regularly guilty of severe avarice. They use every loophole and evasive technique available to
them to avoid paying out more money to their employees. Large corporations especially, use
deceptive techniques to “reel in” new workers, the same today as in the past. The corporations
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advertise high wages or say that one can earn “up to” a certain amount. However, once engaged
in employment, the employees find themselves receiving a significantly smaller amount than
they had at first believed they would receive. Ehrenreich infers that on multiple occasions,
Walmart has failed to pay their employees appropriately for overtime hours, while according to
federal law, “time and a half” must be paid for any hours over the normal 40 per week. At the
Menards where she inquired, she found that she could have wound up working an eleven hour
shift at minimum wage, when her pay should have been “time and a half” after the first eight
hours of the shift. Similar deceptive practices were used in The Jungle and applied to Marija,
when her pay was shorted for the number of cans she had painted.
Progression in the development of technology and medicine has improved the lives of
even the lowest caste of workers in America, although their circumstances might not be as
desirable as they might like. Though Ehrenreich makes an admirable try at duplicating the life of
a minimum wage worker upon herself, she fails to fully embrace and understand the lifestyle.
The hardships she often complains of amount to little when compared to the death and disease
that struck down thousands every season in the early 1900s. Her message, though, remains clear,
illustrating the continuing deceptive ways of man and the inherent avarice of society.