1 / 11

CALL OF THE WILD

CALL OF THE WILD. By Jack London. Jack London. 1876-1916 American author, journalist, and social activist Passionate about unionization, socialism, the rights of workers Wrote a dystopian novel, The Iron Heel. Family Life. Parents weren’t legally married, but lived the “married” life

ina
Télécharger la présentation

CALL OF THE WILD

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CALL OF THE WILD By Jack London

  2. Jack London • 1876-1916 • American author, journalist, and social activist • Passionate about unionization, socialism, the rights of workers • Wrote a dystopian novel, The Iron Heel

  3. Family Life • Parents weren’t legally married, but lived the “married” life • London’s mother thought London’s father was possessed by an Indian chief when she got pregnant • Father wanted mother to have an abortion • Mother shot herself, but missed • Mother had baby, but gave him to slave to raise for the first year of his life

  4. Childhood • Mother married Civil War veteran, John London • The new family of three moved to San Francisco and then to Oakland • London at the age of nine with dog, Rollo

  5. Gold Rush and First Success • Joined in the Klondike Rush • Trip turned out to be detrimental for London • London got scurvy, which caused him to lose his four front teeth, facial scars, and pain in his hips and legs.

  6. Marriages • Married Bessie and had two children, Joan and Becky • After four years, the marriage was dissolved • His next marriage was to Charmain Kittredge, who was a nymphomaniac • London was a cheater!

  7. Beauty Ranch • Beauty Ranch was London’s dream • Spent $80,000 ($1,930,000 nowadays) to build his dream home • The house he named “Wolf House” was 15,000 sq. ft. • Two weeks before his dream home was done, it burnt down • It is now a National Landmark called Jack London State Historic Park

  8. Plagiarism • Call of the Wild  My Dogs in the Northland • London wrote author a letter thanking him for the idea • Moon Face  The Passing of the Cock-Eye Blacklock • Based on the same newspaper event • Love of Life  Lost in the Land of the Midnight Sun • New York World published both stories side by side, showing how similar they were to each other • The Bishop’s Vision  The Bishop of London & Public Morality • The author of TBOLPM demanded that London pay him 1/60th of the royalties he received (London said no)

  9. Death of London • Some say that he committed suicide by drug overdose (morphine) • His death certificate sites uremia as the cause of death • Died on a sleeping porch on his cottage on Beauty Ranch • Buried with his second wife

  10. The Beginnings of COTW • On January 26, 1903, London submitted COTW to Saturday Evening Post • SEP agreed to publish it, but London was instructed to cut the text by 5000 words and name his price • He agreed to cut the text and wanted 3¢ a word, which was $750 • Macmillian, a publishing company, bought the text for $2000

  11. COTW History • Begins on an estate in Santa Clara Valley • The setting of the story is based off the Bond Family Farm, where he spent much time • Buck, the protagonist, is based off a St. Bernard/Scotch shepherd mix dog that the Bond brothers lent to London • COTW is a story about Buck’s fight to survive

More Related