Harriet Beecher Stowe is the critically-acclaimed author of the book Uncle Tom’s Cabin. The title itself is ironic because Tom is a slave who does not own or have a home. The cabin phrase is just a metaphor for the title of the book. This book has been judged harshly for being a sentimental piece of trash that is too simple to read (Hobbs, June). I do not attest to the merit of that statement. I think the book is a well-developed novel that outlines and highlights the issues of slavery and why it is such an inimical issue that needed to be corrected. However, could have done without the insufferable authorial intrusions made by Stowe throughout the book. I saw them as nothing more than a distraction. While the book is based mainly on slavery, it has religious overtones, specifically Christianity. Christianity is “the religion derived from Jesus Christ, based on the Bible as sacred scripture, and professed by Eastern, Roman Catholic, and Protestant bodies” (merriam-webster.com). The nature of true Christianity is present in the Christ figures, the presence of God, and the concept of sacrifice. Eva and Uncle Tom are both Christ figures in this novel. These characters display elements and characteristics of Jesus Christ, and they act in some of the same ways that He did. They both are strong characters throughout the novel. They both illustrated Christian values of sacrifice and selflessness. You can see that these are some of the main characters or even the protagonists.
In Uncle Tom’s Cabin, Harriet Beecher Stowe uses the character of Augustine St. Clare to play a very important role in expressing her views of abolition to the reader throughout the novel. St. Clare is, in himself, a huge contradiction of a character, as his way of life is supported by the same system that he despises, slavery. St. Clare professes multiple times in the book that slavery is wrong, yet he holds slaves and refuses to release them, making him a hypocrite whose morals are right, mainly because of his mother, but he is unwilling to do the right thing. St. Clare symbolizes some of the southern slave owners at the time who knew that slavery was a sin and an act against God, but refused to stand up and stop it. St. Clare is such an essential character in Uncle Tom’s Cabin, and he is an important part of the overall message of the novel and Stowe’s interjection of her abolitionist views that are throughout the novel.
Uncle Tom’s Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe is a unique historical fiction novel which portrays life during the American Civil War. In this story, Harriet Beecher Stowe tells the tale of Uncle Tom, along with several other slaves, and their journey through the wretchedness of slavery. She combines ethics, redemption, religion, and prejudice and presents her readers with an immensely powerful book that gives off an awe-inspiring impact.
The anti-slavery novel, Uncle Tom’s Cabin, by Harriet Beecher Stowe was written at a time when slavery was a largely common practice among Americans. It not only helped lay the foundation for the Civil War but also contained many themes that publicized the evil of slavery to all people. The book contains themes such as the moral power of women, human right, and many more. The most important theme Stowe attempts to portray to readers is the incompatibility of slavery and Christianity. She makes it very clear that she does not believe slavery and Christianity can coexist and that slavery is against all Christian morals. She believes no Christian should allow the existence or practice of slavery.
A. Harriet Beecher Stowe was born in 1811 in Litchfield, Connecticut, which surprises many of her readers. Stowe writes so passionately about slavery that it seems that she must have been raised in the South. Stowe was born into a strong Christian family, which explains why her novels have a strong Christian basis.
In the book, Uncle Tom’s Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe, the author conveys the evils and immoralities regarding slavery by portraying multiple accounts of abuse from slaveowners toward their slaves, humanizing the slaves, and ultimately slaves reaching out to christianity when they are hopeless.
In “Uncle Tom’s Cabin,” christianity and faith are an important themes. Stowe was a committed christian woman. Her book
Since Christianity rests on the principle of universal love, no Christian should tolerate slavery. If all people were to put the principle into practice it would be impossible for the oppression and enslavement of one section of humanity. Throughout the novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin, Harriet Beecher Stowe has illustrated the fact that the system of slavery and principles of Christianity oppose each other. The novel exposes the evils of slavery—its incompatibility with Christian principles—and points the way to its transformation through Christian love through the characterization of some characters in the novel. In Uncle Tom’s Cabin, the Christian principles of forgiveness, compassion, and belief in an afterlife is embodied though the character
Uncle Tom’s Cabin was by no means a factual book. In fact, most, if not all of the events were completely made up. How then can a completely fictional book change the lives of so many? It comes from the power of Stowe’s rhetoric in conjunction with her target audience. Stowe was a white Christian female. She believed slavery was completely wrong and wanted to make a change. But how could she? She was a woman after all and during that time period women simply did not effect change through politics. According to Susan Harris, a respected Stowe researcher, “The men are not evil, but they are involved in the public world” (Harris). However influencing politics was the only way things were going to change and Stowe knew this. She henceforth targeted the white Christian mothers because they in turn could influence their men to make changes in the male dominant society of politics. A perfect method by which to achieve a change in slavery laws indirectly. Stowe especially used the power of sentimentalism to connect with her audience. She did not need facts or evidence, all she needed to effect change in the hearts of the women was a general feel for the subject. The women of that day were very sensitive and yet very powerful in the home. Stowe capitalized on this by using the Christ figures of Tom and Eva and their experiences during the slavery era to evoke a feeling of compassion for them in her audience. By using more emotion and targeting the human aspect of
Published in the early 1850’s, Uncle Tom’s Cabin had a huge impact on our nation and contributed to the tension over slavery. It was written by Harriet Beecher Stowe, a woman who was involved in religious and feminist causes. Stowe’s influence on the northern states was remarkable. Her fictional novel about slave life of her current time has been thought to be one of the main things that led up to the Civil War. The purpose of writing it, as is often said, was to expose the evils of slavery to the North where many were unaware of just what went on in the rest of the country. The book was remarkably successful and sold 300,000 copies by the end of its first year. It is even rumored that
“Uncle Tom’s Cabin” is a classic book about slavery. Set in Kentucky, middle 1800’s, it gives readers a glimpse of what life would be like as a slave. Owned by a kind slave owner, Mr. Shelby, Tom is the ideal slave, loyal, trustworthy and kind, but when his master goes into debt, he is sold to a mean man that treats him cruelly. Along with Tom, Harry, a young child, is to be sold, but when his mother, Eliza Harris, finds out her child is going to be taken from her, she flees on a journey to freedom in Canada. In “Uncle Tom’s Cabin,” the author, Harriet Beecher Stowe, uses character types from older, traditional texts to make them seem new.
As many people say history was written by the victors, we need to remember there would be no victors without the struggle and turmoil of those that lost. This is what Harriet Beecher Stowe’s compelling novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin has taught us in regards to the war on slavery. In the midst of the 1800’s, Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote her best-selling novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin, to address the various issues regarding race during this century. Throughout her novel, readers learn the lives of slaves, slave masters, and their families, which leads to the understanding of a unique lifestyle among the characters. As her novel is important in today’s society, it made an even greater impact during the nineteenth century as it portrays the ideology of the Civil War and the abolitionists.
Another female in Uncle Tom’s Cabin who exhibits enormous strength is Eva St. Clare, a five-year-old girl whose father buys Tom after he saves Eva from drowning in the
The first character we will discuss is Emily Shelby who is the wife of Arthur Shelby who is a Kentucky Plantation owner and the owner of Uncle Tom. Mrs. Shelby is a kind, loving, and Christian woman who is strongly opposed to slavery and takes it upon herself to treat them with most respect. Mrs. Shelby from a spiritual standpoint cares about her slaves relationship with God and teaches his word to them. Mr. Shelby and Mrs. Shelby treat the slaves with kindness but differ significantly in regards to slavery. Unlike other women of this time period, Mrs. Shelby stands by her views and morals regardless if her
Uncle Tom’s Cabin, by Harriet Beecher Stowe, is arguably the most influential novel in American History. Stowe’s sentimental writing style seized the imagination of her readers and Uncle Tom’s Cabin became the standard of the abolition movement. Uncle Tom, one of the protagonists, spreads Christianity and dies for his faith, like Christ. By equating Uncle Tom with Jesus Christ, Harriet Beecher Stowe deliberately provokes her audience to social change and abolition.
Whenever people are going through a tough time, they have different reactions in terms of how they handle the situation that they are in. Some people just decide to stay in the situation that they are in, some turn to sports, and some people use their faith to pray and act as a good Christian to get through their tough times. Published in 1852 by Harriet Beecher Stowe, the characters in Uncle Tom’s Cabin heavily and frequently turn to God in order to pray that they get out of the situation the characters are in which is being slave. The novel shows the escape of two slaves named George and Eliza and the journey of the most moral and devout Christian in this book the main character Uncle Tom. The concept and ideology of religion in Uncle Tom’s plays a large role in the novel because it religion influences the actions of the slaves and other characters on numerous occasions and it provides a better sense of identity for the slaves. In addition, after reading this classic novel, it is evident that the author, Harriet Beecher Stowe, is heavily against the practice of slavery. Lastly, this novel goes against some of the classic stereotypes regarding slavery.