Harriet Beecher Stowe expressed a need to awaken sympathy and feeling for
the African race in the novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin. She was born June 14, 1811 in
Litchfield, Connecticut. She was the daughter of a Calvinist minister and she
and her family was all devout Christians, her father being a preacher and her
siblings following. Her Christian attitude much reflected her attitude towards
slavery. She was for abolishing it, because it was, to her, a very unchristian
and cruel institution. Her novel, therefore, focused on the ghastly points of
slavery, including the whippings, beatings, and forced sexual encounters brought
upon slaves by their masters. She wrote the book to be a force against slavery,
and was joining in with the feelings of many other women of her time, whom all
became more outspoken and influential in reform movements, including temperance
and women\'s suffrage. The main point of Harriet Beecher Stowe in the writing of
Uncle Tom\'s Cabin was to bring to light, slavery, to people in the north. In
this she hoped to eventually sway people against slavery.
Stowe did a great
job with this book. What is believed to be one of the influential books of all
time, ranking with the works of Adam Smith and Machiavelli, Uncle Tom\'s Cabin
became an abolitionist\'s bible. During its time it was revised, dramatized, and
published often. The effect of her book on the north and everywhere in the US
was unforeseen. The book was popular and caused abolitionism to run wild among
northerners. The south hated the book because of its portrayal of its (The
South\'s) \"peculiar institution\". It might have been influential enough to be
considered one of the causes of the civil war, by creating a greater number of
northerners against slavery. It displayed to the north all the evils of slavery,
by creating human characters out of slaves, who were thought to be inhuman.
Stowe\'s ideas were that slavery is wrong, which is a correct assumption. A
human should not be owned because we are not animals, plants, or minerals.
Humans have souls and should and can not be owned by other r humans, because
they are all created equal.
Stowe\'s style of staggering chapters about Tom
with chapters about Eliza was effective by showing hope in two different
situations. Eliza hoped for freedom while Tom hoped for eternity. Stowe plays
these two motivations of her characters off each other to project the point of
the book to the intelligent. She emphasizes her main points throughout the whole
book, perhaps too much, but she was right in doing this, too make sure no one
missed the point. She is biased against slaves, oddly enough. She portrays the
whiter ones as more intelligent and clever, as is seen with George and Eliza,
and the darker ones as more slow-witted, for example, Tom. Stowe also did what
any intelligent reader from the beginning of the book expects of her. She
creates a chapter at the end reinforcing the story in the book with historical
facts, meaning that it\'s based loosely on the real world.
She seems to do
her research well for the story, and her perspective was rather open, backing up
slaveholders as well as abolitionists by expressing the slaveholders feelings of
hopelessness towards going against society, seen in St. Clare. She made the
slaves more human and the slaveholders appear to be morally wrong, but not by
always using morally correct slaves and masters without morals. For example,
Stowe creates a character, Adolf, the overseer of sorts for St. Clare. Adolf is
a slave who is not morally correct he steals from St. Clare often, yet he
appears more human for doing so. The slaves or human but not divine, as are the
masters, creating a sense of equality, which Stowe wanted to put across. She
wrote the book well, choosing where it was best to put which idea, and making
many allusions to historical events around the time, which made her book more
popular to the people of her time by involving other things they knew of into
the story.
Overall, Uncle Tom\'s Cabin was well written, organized, and
historically accurate. Harriet Beecher Stowe used her knowledge of the past to
write a clear argument for the abolition of slavery, by creating an interesting
enough book to get her ideas to the common people. Her book was influential
because it not only told her ideas, but because it states her ideas
understandably, something not all writers are able to do. The entire theme of
the book is about the evils of slavery; it was written to try to motivate people
to eliminate it. Stowe is defiant and certain that slavery must not be slowly
eliminated, but must stop immediately.
Works Cited
Stowe, Harriet. Uncle Tom’s Cabin.
http://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/_generate/authors-S.htm
http://jefferson.village.virginia.edu/utc/sitemap.html
http://www.chfweb.com/smith/harriet.html
billy cooke