Wednesday, April 25, 2012

The People of the Abyss by Jack London



Abandon all hope, ye who enter here
The People of the Abyss, first published in 1903, is Jack London’s first-hand account of life in the slums of the East End district of London. A combination of undercover investigative reportage and sociological research, this book provides a vivid picture of an urban environment which a century ago was notorious worldwide for its horrible living conditions. It is analogous to the chronicles of contemporary authors who venture incognito into the back alleys of Mogadishu, the slums of Calcutta, or the favelas of Rio. Although renowned for his novels and short stories, Jack London was also an excellent journalist. It is a testament to his skills as a reporter that he holds the reader’s interest in what is essentially a series of National Geographic articles about a place you would never want to visit. In the 27 chapters of this book, London examines the East End from 27 different angles, offering chapters on the workhouse, a night spent on the streets, breakfast with the Salvation Army, hop picking, police reports, and suicide. Each of the chapters could stand alone as an autonomous essay, with Chapter 19, “The Ghetto” being probably the best encapsulation of the volume as a whole.

In the worst portions of the book London rattles off lists of mind-numbing demographic statistics; in the best passages he relates the haunting life stories of individual workers trapped in this maze of overcrowding, unemployment, squalor, filth, and degradation. London’s attitude towards the East End inhabitants alternates between empathy, condescension, disgust, and admiration. Although he views the denizens of this vile ghetto as the casualties of the industrial revolution and the victims of a capitalist society, London’s political views at this early point in his career do not come across as firmly defined. While in later years he would have proposed socialist revolution as the cure for the East End’s ills, here his plan of attack is a mixture of complaints about government efficiency and exhortations to the reader’s sympathy. An underlying theme reverberating throughout the book is London’s variation on the golden rule: “What is not good enough for you, is not good enough for other men.” The People of the Abyss is a valuable historical document of poverty during the industrial revolution. It may be the most depressing book you’ll ever read, but it’s quite educational and at times deeply moving. Even if you’re a fan of London there’s no guarantee you’ll like this book, but it has its merits and is worth a look.

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3 comments:

  1. Karl,

    Did Jack London really visit End Slums?
    I have read some of his biographies on line, and no one mentions this trip at this moment of his life. I am no expert at all, I am just curious. Could you help me out with this doubt?

    Rudy

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  2. Karl,

    I ment the East End district of London.

    Thank you,

    Rudy

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  3. Rudy,

    I'm not up on all the biographies of London, but I recently read Wolf: The Lives of Jack London by James L. Haley, which covers his trip to London in Chapter 8. Also, the recently published book Jack London, Photographer by Jeanne Campbell Reesman features a chapter of photographs London took while in the East End. Chapter XXII of The Book of Jack London (which I have not read), written by his widow, very briefly mentions the East End trip at the end of the chapter:
    http://www.jacklondons.net/writings/BookJackLondon/Volume1/chapter22.html
    Here also is an article on The People of the Abyss from Victorian Web:
    http://www.victorianweb.org/genre/slumfiction/jacklondon.html
    London led such a full and exciting life that most of the biographical summaries you find online (Wikipedia included) tend to gloss over the East End trip in favor of more romantic adventures to the Klondike or the South Seas. Nowadays London is primarily remembered as an adventure writer, while his writings on politics and social reform have faded from the public memory. If you are really interested in London's trip to the East End, the best source is London's own account, The People of the Abyss.

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