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The Power of Uncle Tom's Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe

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Do you have dreams? Do you think that dreams that manifest into actions can change the status quo? Do you think one person can change the world? Robin Williams once said: "No matter what people tell you, words and ideas can change the world. “This quote in many ways illustrates what Harriet Beecher Stowe wanted to accomplish with her novel Uncle Tom's Cabin. The anti-slavery novel was published in 1852 and according to Will Kaufman “helped lay the groundwork for the civil war."Stowe was an active abolitionist but her true profession was a being a teacher in Connecticut, where she was born and raised. The novel's main character is Tom, a slave who has gone through much suffering during his life and whose story the other characters revolve …show more content…

These things aided the North along with Stowe's novel in the wins and ultimate defeat of the south in the civil war. Without the aid of Stowe's novel the North would have had fewer volunteers for the union army because the North was mainly unaffected by the South's succession.

Stowe's novel had a great impact on the political world. The novel empathize the horror in slavery and racism. It helped illustrate and bring to life the need to stop slavery to people who didn't necessarily know how slavery worked in the real world instead of theory. Abraham Lincoln upon meeting Stowe said "So you're the little woman who wrote the book that started this Great War." Stowe's book demonstrated the cruelty of plantation owners illustrating them as mean, nasty men such as Simon Legree. Legree a northerner by birth moved to the south. Is arguably the main antagonist of the Uncle Tom’s Cabin. His main goal throughout the novel was to break Tom’s strong Christian faith through harsh treatment and savage beatings. He later in the books orders to have Tom whipped to death because he refuses to tell him where Cassie and Emmeline have ran off to. This forced the public to become aware of the harsh treatment of slaves and the brutality of the fugitive slave law. With the help of the novel many northerners aided slaves in escaping north to Canada

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