
By Upton Sinclair
CHARACTERS
THE MACHINE
ACT I
ACT II
ACT III
In a modest, Arts‑and‑Crafts‑styled tenement on the Lower East Side, journalist Julia Patterson juggles a quiet supper with the latest headlines, when she welcomes Jack Bullen, a fervent volunteer socialist. Their conversation reveals a shared conviction that exposing injustice can awaken the public, and Julia unveils her latest mission: to bring Laura Hegan, the privileged daughter of a powerful traction magnate, into the cause. The clash between Jack’s idealistic vigor and Julia’s pragmatic muck‑raking sets the stage for a tense but hopeful dialogue about wealth, power, and the possibility of change.
The play’s characters embody the era’s social fault lines—industrialists, reformers, and the city’s forgotten poor—each speaking with a distinct urgency. As Julia attempts to educate Laura, listeners are drawn into the moral tug‑of‑war between the glittering allure of money and the gritty reality of exploitation, hinting at the larger battles that will unfold beyond the tenement walls.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (92K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Charles Franks, the Online Distributed Proofreading team, and David Widger
Release date
2002-07-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1878–1968
Best known for The Jungle, he turned fiction into a tool for exposing injustice and pushing for reform. His stories mixed sharp reporting, moral urgency, and a deep belief that writing could change public life.
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by Upton Sinclair
by Upton Sinclair

by Upton Sinclair

by Upton Sinclair

by Upton Sinclair

by Upton Sinclair

by Upton Sinclair

by Upton Sinclair