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Uncle Tom's Cabin

Uncle Tom's Cabin; or, Life Among the Lowly is an anti-slavery novel by American author Harriet Beecher Stowe. Published in two volumes in 1852, the novel had a profound effect on attitudes toward African Americans and slavery in the U.S., and is said to have "helped lay the groundwork for the [American] Civil War".[1][2][3]

Uncle Tom's Cabin
Title page for Volume I of the first edition of Uncle Tom's Cabin (1852)
AuthorHarriet Beecher Stowe
Original titleUncle Tom's Cabin; or, Life Among the Lowly.
IllustratorHammatt Billings
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreNovel
Published1852 (two volumes)
PublisherJohn P. Jewett and Company, after serialization in The National Era beginning June 5, 1851
OCLC1077982310
813.3
LC ClassPS2954 .U5
Followed byA Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin 

Stowe, a Connecticut-born woman of English descent, was part of the religious Beecher family and an active abolitionist. She wrote the sentimental novel to depict the reality of slavery while also asserting that Christian love could overcome slavery.[4][5][6] The novel focuses on the character of Uncle Tom, a long-suffering black slave around whom the stories of the other characters revolve.

In the United States, Uncle Tom's Cabin was the best-selling novel and the second best-selling book of the 19th century, following the Bible.[7][8] It is credited with helping fuel the abolitionist cause in the 1850s.[9] The influence attributed to the book was so great that a likely apocryphal story arose of Abraham Lincoln meeting Stowe at the start of the Civil War and declaring, "So this is the little lady who started this great war."[10][11]

The book and the plays it inspired helped popularize a number of negative stereotypes about black people,[12][13][3] including that of the namesake character "Uncle Tom". The term came to be associated with an excessively subservient person.[14] These later associations with Uncle Tom's Cabin have, to an extent, overshadowed the historical effects of the book as a "vital antislavery tool".[15] Nonetheless, the novel remains a "landmark" in protest literature,[16] with later books such as The Jungle by Upton Sinclair and Silent Spring by Rachel Carson owing a large debt to it.[17]

Sources

 
An engraving of Harriet Beecher Stowe from 1872, based on an oil painting by Alonzo Chappel

Stowe, a Connecticut-born teacher at the Hartford Female Seminary and an active abolitionist, wrote the novel as a response to the passage, in 1850, of the second Fugitive Slave Act. Much of the book was composed at her house in Brunswick, Maine, where her husband, Calvin Ellis Stowe, taught at his alma mater, Bowdoin College.[18][19][20]

Stowe was partly inspired to create Uncle Tom's Cabin by the slave narrative The Life of Josiah Henson, Formerly a Slave, Now an Inhabitant of Canada, as Narrated by Himself (1849).[21] Henson, a formerly enslaved black man, had lived and worked on a 3,700-acre (15 km2) plantation in North Bethesda, Maryland, owned by Isaac Riley.[22] Henson escaped slavery in 1830 by fleeing to the Province of Upper Canada (now Ontario), where he helped other fugitive slaves settle and become self-sufficient.[22]

Stowe was also inspired by the posthumous biography of Phebe Ann Jacobs, a devout Congregationalist of Brunswick, Maine.[23][24] Born on a slave plantation in Lake Hiawatha, New Jersey, Jacobs was enslaved for most of her life, including by the president of Bowdoin College.[25][26][27][28] In her final years, Jacobs lived as a free woman, laundering clothes for Bowdoin students. She achieved respect from her community due to her devout religious beliefs,[28] and her funeral was widely attended.[29][30]

Another source Stowe used as research for Uncle Tom's Cabin was American Slavery as It Is: Testimony of a Thousand Witnesses, a volume co-authored by Theodore Dwight Weld and the Grimké sisters.[31][32] Stowe also conducted interviews with people who escaped slavery.[33] Stowe mentioned a number of these inspirations and sources in A Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin (1853).[31] This non-fiction book was intended to not only verify Stowe's claims about slavery but also point readers to the many "publicly available documents"[31] detailing the horrors of slavery.[34][35]

Publication

 
First appearance of Uncle Tom's Cabin as serialized in The National Era (June 5, 1851)

Uncle Tom's Cabin first appeared as a 40-week serial in The National Era, an abolitionist periodical, starting with the June 5, 1851, issue. It was originally intended as a shorter narrative that would run for only a few weeks. Stowe expanded the story significantly, however, and it was instantly popular, such that protests were sent to the Era office when she missed an issue.[36] The final installment was released in the April 1, 1852, issue of Era. Stowe arranged for the story's copyright to be registered with the United States District Court for the District of Maine. She renewed her copyright in 1879 and the work entered the public domain on May 12, 1893.[37]

While the story was still being serialized, the publisher John P. Jewett contracted with Stowe to turn Uncle Tom's Cabin into a book.[38] Convinced the book would be popular, Jewett made the unusual decision (for the time) to have six full-page illustrations by Hammatt Billings engraved for the first printing.[39] Published in book form on March 20, 1852, the novel sold 3,000 copies on that day alone,[36] and soon sold out its complete print run.[40] In the first year after it was published, 300,000 copies of the book were sold in the United States.[41] Eight printing presses, running incessantly, could barely keep up with the demand.[42]

By mid-1853, sales of the book dramatically decreased[43] and Jewett went out of business during the Panic of 1857.[44] In June 1860, the right to publish Uncle Tom's Cabin passed to the Boston firm Ticknor and Fields,[45] which put the book back in print in November 1862. After that demand began to yet again increase.[46][47] Houghton Mifflin Company acquired the rights from Ticknor in 1878.[48] In 1879, a new edition of Uncle Tom's Cabin was released, repackaging the novel as an "American classic".[47] Through the 1880s until its copyright expired, the book served as a mainstay and reliable source of income for Houghton Mifflin.[43] By the end of the nineteenth century, the novel was widely available in a large number of editions[47] and in the United States it became the second best-selling book of that century after the Bible.[7]

Uncle Tom's Cabin sold equally well in Britain; the first London edition appeared in May 1852 and sold 200,000 copies.[49] In a few years, over 1.5 million copies of the book were in circulation in Britain, although most of these were infringing copies (a similar situation occurred in the United States).[50] By 1857, the novel had been translated into 20 languages.[51] Translator Lin Shu published the first Chinese translation in 1901, which was also the first American novel translated into that language.[52]

Plot

Eliza escapes with her son; Tom sold "down the river"

 
Full-page illustration by Hammatt Billings for the first edition of Uncle Tom's Cabin (1852). Eliza tells Uncle Tom that he has been sold and she is running away to save her child.

The book opens with a Kentucky farmer named Arthur Shelby facing the loss of his farm because of debts. Even though he and his wife Emily Shelby believe that they have a benevolent relationship with their slaves, Shelby decides to raise the needed funds by selling two of them—Uncle Tom, a middle-aged man with a wife and children, and Harry, the son of Emily Shelby's maid Eliza—to Mr. Haley, a coarse slave trader. Emily Shelby is averse to this idea because she had promised her maid that her child would never be sold; Emily's son, George Shelby, hates to see Tom go because he sees the man as his friend and mentor.

When Eliza overhears Mr. and Mrs. Shelby discussing plans to sell Tom and Harry, Eliza determines to run away with her son. The novel states that Eliza made this decision because she fears losing her only surviving child (she had already miscarried two children). Eliza departs that night, leaving a note of apology to her mistress. She later makes a dangerous crossing over the ice of the Ohio River to escape her pursuers.

As Tom is sold, Mr. Haley takes him to a riverboat on the Mississippi River and from there Tom is to be transported to a slave market. While on board, Tom meets Eva, an angelic little white girl. They quickly become friends. Eva falls into the river and Tom dives into the river to save her life. Being grateful to Tom, Eva's father Augustine St. Clare buys him from Haley and takes him with the family to their home in New Orleans. Tom and Eva begin to relate to one another because of the deep Christian faith they both share.

Eliza's family hunted; Tom's life with St. Clare

 
Illustration of Tom and Eva by Hammatt Billings for the 1853 deluxe edition of Uncle Tom's Cabin

During Eliza's escape, she meets up with her husband George Harris, who had run away previously. They decide to attempt to reach Canada, but are tracked by Tom Loker, a slave hunter hired by Mr. Haley. Eventually Loker and his men trap Eliza and her family, causing George to shoot him in the side. Worried that Loker may die, Eliza convinces George to bring the slave hunter to a nearby Quaker settlement for medical treatment.

Back in New Orleans, St. Clare debates slavery with his Northern cousin Ophelia who, while opposing slavery, is prejudiced against black people. St. Clare, however, believes he is not biased, even though he is a slave owner. In an attempt to show Ophelia that her prejudiced views against black people are wrong, St. Clare purchases Topsy, a young black slave, and asks Ophelia to educate her.

After Tom has lived with the St. Clares for two years, Eva grows very ill. Before she dies she experiences a vision of heaven, which she shares with the people around her. As a result of her death and vision, the other characters resolve to change their lives, Ophelia promising to throw off her personal prejudices against blacks, Topsy saying she will better herself, and St. Clare pledging to free Tom.

Tom sold to Simon Legree

Before St. Clare can follow through on his pledge, he dies after being stabbed outside a tavern. His wife reneges on her late husband's vow and sells Tom at auction to a vicious plantation owner named Simon Legree. Tom is taken to rural Louisiana with other new slaves including Emmeline, whom Simon Legree has purchased to use as a sex slave.

 
Full-page illustration by Hammatt Billings for the first edition of Uncle Tom's Cabin (1852). Cassy, another of Legree's slaves, ministers to Uncle Tom after his whipping.

Legree begins to hate Tom when Tom refuses Legree's order to whip his fellow slave. Legree beats Tom viciously and resolves to crush his new slave's faith in God. Despite Legree's cruelty, Tom refuses to stop reading his Bible and comforting the other slaves as best he can. While at the plantation, Tom meets Cassy, another slave whom Legree used as a sex slave. Cassy tells her story to Tom. She was previously separated from her son and daughter when they were sold. She became pregnant again but killed the child because she could not tolerate having another child separated from her.

Tom Loker, changed after being healed by the Quakers, returns to the story. He has helped George, Eliza, and Harry enter Canada from Lake Erie and become free. In Louisiana, Uncle Tom almost succumbs to hopelessness as his faith in God is tested by the hardships of the plantation. He has two visions, one of Jesus and one of Eva, which renew his resolve to remain a faithful Christian, even unto death. He encourages Cassy to escape, which she does, taking Emmeline with her. When Tom refuses to tell Legree where Cassy and Emmeline have gone, Legree orders his overseers to kill Tom. As Tom is dying, he forgives the overseers who savagely beat him. Humbled by the character of the man they have killed, both men become Christians. George Shelby, Arthur Shelby's son, arrives to buy Tom's freedom, but Tom dies shortly after they meet.

Final section

On their boat ride to freedom, Cassy and Emmeline meet George Harris' sister Madame de Thoux and accompany her to Canada. Madame de Thoux and George Harris were separated in their childhood. Cassy discovers that Eliza is her long-lost daughter who was sold as a child. Now that their family is together again, they travel to France and eventually Liberia, the African nation created for former American slaves. George Shelby returns to the Kentucky farm, where after his father's death, he frees all his slaves. George Shelby urges them to remember Tom's sacrifice every time they look at his cabin. He decides to lead a pious Christian life just as Uncle Tom did.

Major characters

 
Simon Legree assaults Uncle Tom.
 
Uncle Tom and Little Eva, painting by Edwin Longsden Long (1866)
  • Uncle Tom, the title character, was initially seen as a noble, long-suffering Christian slave.[14] In more recent years, his name has become an epithet directed towards African-Americans who are accused of selling out to whites.[14] Stowe intended Tom to be a "noble hero" and a praiseworthy person.[53] Throughout the book, far from allowing himself to be exploited, Tom stands up for his beliefs and refuses to betray friends and family.[14]
  • Eliza is an enslaved personal maid to Mrs. Shelby, who escapes to the North with her five-year-old son Harry after he is sold to Mr. Haley. Her husband, George, eventually finds Eliza and Harry in Ohio and emigrates with them to Canada, then France, and finally Liberia.[54] The character Eliza was inspired by an account given at Lane Theological Seminary in Cincinnati by John Rankin to Stowe's husband Calvin, a professor at the school. According to Rankin, in February 1838, a young slave woman, Eliza Harris, had escaped across the frozen Ohio River to the town of Ripley with her child in her arms and stayed at his house on her way farther north.[55]
  • Evangeline "Eva" St. Clare is the daughter of Augustine St. Clare. Eva enters the narrative when Uncle Tom is traveling via steamship to New Orleans to be sold, and he rescues the five- or six-year-old girl from drowning. Eva begs her father to buy Tom, and he becomes the head coachman at the St. Clare house. He spends most of his time with the angelic Eva. Eva often talks about love and forgiveness, convincing the dour slave girl Topsy that she deserves love. She even touches the heart of her Aunt Ophelia.[56] Eventually Eva falls terminally ill. Before dying, she gives a lock of her hair to each of the slaves, telling them that they must become Christians so that they may see each other in Heaven. On her deathbed, she convinces her father to free Tom, but because of circumstances the promise never materializes.[57]
  • Simon Legree is a cruel slave owner—a Northerner by birth—whose name has become synonymous with greed and cruelty.[58] He is arguably the novel's main antagonist. His goal is to demoralize Tom and break him of his religious faith; he eventually orders Tom whipped to death out of frustration for his slave's unbreakable belief in God. The novel reveals that, as a young man, he had abandoned his sickly mother for a life at sea and ignored her letter to see her one last time at her deathbed. He sexually exploits Cassy, who despises him, and later sets his designs on Emmeline.[59] It is unclear if Legree is based on any actual individuals. Reports surfaced in the late 1800s that Stowe had in mind a wealthy cotton and sugar plantation owner named Meredith Calhoun,[60][61] who settled on the Red River north of Alexandria, Louisiana.[62] Rev. Josiah Henson, inspiration for the character of Uncle Tom, said that Legree was modeled after Bryce Lytton,[63] "who broke my arm and maimed me for life."[64]

Literary themes and theories

Major themes

Uncle Tom's Cabin is dominated by a single theme: the evil and immorality of slavery.[65] While Stowe weaves other subthemes throughout her text, such as the moral authority of motherhood and the power of Christian love,[4] she emphasizes the connections between these and the horrors of slavery. Stowe sometimes changed the story's voice so she could give a "homily" on the destructive nature of slavery[66] (such as when a white woman on the steamboat carrying Tom further south states, "The most dreadful part of slavery, to my mind, is its outrages of feelings and affections—the separating of families, for example.").[67] One way Stowe showed the evil of slavery[49] was how this "peculiar institution" forcibly separated families from each other.[68]

 
"The fugitives are safe in a free land." Illustration by Hammatt Billings for Uncle Tom's Cabin, first edition. The image shows George Harris, Eliza, Harry, and Mrs. Smyth after they escape to freedom.

One of the subthemes presented in the novel is temperance.[69] Stowe made it somewhat subtle and in some cases she wove it into events that would also support the dominant theme. One example of this is when Augustine St. Clare is killed, he attempted to stop a brawl between two inebriated men in a cafe and was stabbed. Another example is the death of Prue, who was whipped to death for being drunk on a consistent basis; however, her reasons for doing so is due to the loss of her baby. In the opening of the novel, the fates of Eliza and her son are being discussed between slave owners over wine. Considering that Stowe intended this to be a subtheme, this scene could foreshadow future events that put alcohol in a bad light.[70]

Because Stowe saw motherhood as the "ethical and structural model for all of American life"[71] and also believed that only women had the moral authority to save[72] the United States from the demon of slavery, another major theme of Uncle Tom's Cabin is the moral power and sanctity of women.[73] Through characters like Eliza, who escapes from slavery to save her young son (and eventually reunites her entire family), or Eva, who is seen as the "ideal Christian",[74] Stowe shows how she believed women could save those around them from even the worst injustices. Though later critics have noted that Stowe's female characters are often domestic clichés instead of realistic women,[75] Stowe's novel "reaffirmed the importance of women's influence" and helped pave the way for the women's rights movement in the following decades.[76]

Stowe's puritanical religious beliefs show up in the novel's final, overarching theme—the exploration of the nature of Christian love[4][77] and how she feels Christian theology is fundamentally incompatible with slavery.[78] This theme is most evident when Tom urges St. Clare to "look away to Jesus" after the death of St. Clare's beloved daughter Eva. After Tom dies, George Shelby eulogizes Tom by saying, "What a thing it is to be a Christian."[79] Because Christian themes play such a large role in Uncle Tom's Cabin—and because of Stowe's frequent use of direct authorial interjections on religion and faith—the novel often takes the "form of a sermon".[80]

Literary theories

Over the years scholars have postulated a number of theories about what Stowe was trying to say with the novel (aside from the major theme of condemning slavery). For example, as an ardent Christian and active abolitionist, Stowe placed many of her religious beliefs into the novel.[81] Some scholars have stated that Stowe saw her novel as offering a solution to the moral and political dilemma that troubled many slavery opponents: whether engaging in prohibited behavior was justified in opposing evil. Was the use of violence to oppose the violence of slavery and the breaking of proslavery laws morally defensible?[82] Which of Stowe's characters should be emulated, the passive Uncle Tom or the defiant George Harris?[83] Stowe's solution was similar to Ralph Waldo Emerson's: God's will would be followed if each person sincerely examined his principles and acted on them.[84]

Scholars have also seen the novel as expressing the values and ideas of the Free Will Movement.[85] In this view, the character of George Harris embodies the principles of free labor, and the complex character of Ophelia represents those Northerners who condoned compromise with slavery. In contrast to Ophelia is Dinah, who operates on passion. During the course of the novel Ophelia is transformed, just as the Republican Party (three years later) proclaimed that the North must transform itself and stand up for its antislavery principles.[86]

Feminist theory can also be seen at play in Stowe's book, with the novel as a critique of the patriarchal nature of slavery.[87] For Stowe, blood relations rather than paternalistic relations between masters and slaves formed the basis of families. Moreover, Stowe viewed national solidarity as an extension of a person's family, thus feelings of nationality stemmed from possessing a shared race. Consequently, she advocated African colonization for freed slaves and not amalgamation into American society.[88]

The book has also been seen as an attempt to redefine masculinity as a necessary step toward the abolition of slavery.[89] In this view, abolitionists had begun to resist the vision of aggressive and dominant men that the conquest and colonization of the early 19th century had fostered. To change the notion of manhood so that men could oppose slavery without jeopardizing their self-image or their standing in society, some abolitionists drew on principles of women's suffrage and Christianity as well as passivism, and praised men for cooperation, compassion, and civic spirit. Others within the abolitionist movement argued for conventional, aggressive masculine action. All the men in Stowe's novel are representations of either one kind of man or the other.[90]

Style

 
Eliza crossing the icy river, in an 1881 theatre poster

Uncle Tom's Cabin is written in the sentimental[3][91] and melodramatic style common to 19th-century sentimental novels[8] and domestic fiction (also called women's fiction). These genres were the most popular novels of Stowe's time and were "written by, for, and about women"[92] along with featuring a writing style that evoked a reader's sympathy and emotion.[93] Uncle Tom's Cabin has been called a "representative" example of a sentimental novel.[94]

The power in this type of writing can be seen in the reaction of contemporary readers. Georgiana May, a friend of Stowe's, wrote a letter to the author, saying: "I was up last night long after one o'clock, reading and finishing Uncle Tom's Cabin. I could not leave it any more than I could have left a dying child."[95] Another reader is described as obsessing on the book at all hours and having considered renaming her daughter Eva.[96] Evidently the death of Little Eva affected a lot of people at that time, because in 1852, 300 baby girls in Boston alone were given that name.[96]

Despite this positive reaction from readers, for decades literary critics dismissed the style found in Uncle Tom's Cabin and other sentimental novels because these books were written by women and so prominently featured what one critic called "women's sloppy emotions".[97] Another literary critic said that had the novel not been about slavery, "it would be just another sentimental novel",[98] and another described the book as "primarily a derivative piece of hack work".[99] In The Literary History of the United States, George F. Whicher called Uncle Tom's Cabin "Sunday-school fiction", full of "broadly conceived melodrama, humor, and pathos".[100]

In 1985 Jane Tompkins expressed a different view with her famous defense of the book in "Sentimental Power: Uncle Tom's Cabin and the Politics of Literary History."[97][101] Tompkins praised the style so many other critics had dismissed, writing that sentimental novels showed how women's emotions had the power to change the world for the better. She also said that the popular domestic novels of the 19th century, including Uncle Tom's Cabin, were remarkable for their "intellectual complexity, ambition, and resourcefulness"; and that Uncle Tom's Cabin offers a "critique of American society far more devastating than any delivered by better-known critics such as Hawthorne and Melville."[102]

Reactions to the novel

Uncle Tom's Cabin has exerted an influence equaled by few other novels in history.[102][103] Upon publication, Uncle Tom's Cabin ignited a firestorm of protest from defenders of slavery (who created a number of books in response to the novel) while the book elicited praise from abolitionists. The novel is considered an influential[104] "landmark" of protest literature.[16]

Contemporary reaction in United States and around the world

 
Stowe responded to criticism by writing A Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin (1853), documenting the veracity of her novel's depiction of slavery.

Uncle Tom's Cabin had an "incalculable"[102] impact on the 19th-century world and captured the imagination of many Americans. In a likely apocryphal story that alludes to the novel's impact, when Abraham Lincoln met Stowe in 1862 he supposedly commented, "So this is the little lady who started this great war."[10][11][105] Historians are undecided if Lincoln actually said this line, and in a letter that Stowe wrote to her husband a few hours after meeting with Lincoln no mention of this comment was made.[106] Many writers have also credited the novel with focusing Northern anger at the injustices of slavery and the Fugitive Slave Law[106] and helping to fuel the abolitionist movement.[9][3] Union general and politician James Baird Weaver said that the book convinced him to become active in the abolitionist movement.[107]

Frederick Douglass was "convinced both of the social uses of the novel and of Stowe's humanitarianism" and heavily promoted the novel in his newspaper during the book's initial release.[108] Though Douglass said Uncle Tom's Cabin was "a work of marvelous depth and power," he also published criticism of the novel, most prominently by Martin Delany. In a series of letters in the paper, Delany accused Stowe of "borrowing (and thus profiting) from the work of black writers to compose her novel" and chastised Stowe for her "apparent support of black colonization to Africa."[108] " Martin was "one of the most out-spoken black critics" of Uncle Tom's Cabin at the time and later wrote Blake; or the Huts of America, a novel where an African American "chooses violent rebellion over Tom's resignation."[109]

White people in the American South were outraged at the novel's release,[49] with the book also roundly criticized by slavery supporters.[35] Southern novelist William Gilmore Simms declared the work utterly false[110] while also calling it slanderous.[111] Reactions ranged from a bookseller in Mobile, Alabama, being forced to leave town for selling the novel[49] to threatening letters sent to Stowe (including a package containing a slave's severed ear).[49] Many Southern writers, like Simms, soon wrote their own books in opposition to Stowe's novel.[112]

Some critics highlighted Stowe's paucity of life-experience relating to Southern life, saying that it led her to create inaccurate descriptions of the region. For instance, she had never been to a Southern plantation. Stowe always said she based the characters of her book on stories she was told by runaway slaves in Cincinnati. It is reported that "She observed firsthand several incidents which galvanized her to write [the] famous anti-slavery novel. Scenes she observed on the Ohio River, including seeing a husband and wife being sold apart, as well as newspaper and magazine accounts and interviews, contributed material to the emerging plot."[113]

In response to these criticisms, in 1853 Stowe published A Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin, an attempt to document the veracity of the novel's depiction of slavery.[31] In the book, Stowe discusses each of the major characters in Uncle Tom's Cabin and cites "real life equivalents" to them while also mounting a more "aggressive attack on slavery in the South than the novel itself had".[34] Like the novel, A Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin was a best-seller, but although Stowe claimed A Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin documented her previously consulted sources, she actually read many of the cited works only after the publication of her novel.[34]

 
A sculpture after an 1869 design by Louis Samain was installed in 1895 on Avenue Louise in Brussels. The scene—a runaway black slave and child attacked by dogs—was inspired by Uncle Tom's Cabin.

Uncle Tom's Cabin also created great interest in the United Kingdom. The first London edition appeared in May 1852 and sold 200,000 copies.[49] Some of this interest was because of British antipathy to America. As one prominent writer explained, "The evil passions which Uncle Tom gratified in England were not hatred or vengeance [of slavery], but national jealousy and national vanity. We have long been smarting under the conceit of America—we are tired of hearing her boast that she is the freest and the most enlightened country that the world has ever seen. Our clergy hate her voluntary system—our Tories hate her democrats—our Whigs hate her parvenus—our Radicals hate her litigiousness, her insolence, and her ambition. All parties hailed Mrs. Stowe as a revolter from the enemy."[114] Charles Francis Adams, the American minister to Britain during the war, argued later that "Uncle Tom's Cabin; or Life among the Lowly, published in 1852, exercised, largely from fortuitous circumstances, a more immediate, considerable and dramatic world-influence than any other book ever printed."[115]

Stowe sent a copy of the book to Charles Dickens, who wrote her in response: "I have read your book with the deepest interest and sympathy, and admire, more than I can express to you, both the generous feeling which inspired it, and the admirable power with which it is executed."[116] The historian and politician Thomas Babington Macaulay wrote in 1852 that "it is the most valuable addition that America has made to English literature."[117]

20th century and modern criticism

In the 20th century, a number of writers attacked Uncle Tom's Cabin not only for the stereotypes the novel had created about African-Americans but also because of "the utter disdain of the Tom character by the black community".[118] These writers included Richard Wright with his collection Uncle Tom's Children (1938) and Chester Himes with his 1943 short story "Heaven Has Changed".[118] Ralph Ellison also critiqued the book with his 1952 novel Invisible Man, with Ellison figuratively killing Uncle Tom in the opening chapter.[118]

 
Uncle Tom and Eva, mass-market Staffordshire figure, England, 1855–1860, glazed and painted earthenware

In 1945 James Baldwin published his influential and infamous critical essay "Everbody's Protest Novel".[119] In the essay, Baldwin described Uncle Tom's Cabin as "a bad novel, having, in its self-righteousness, virtuous sentimentality".[120] He argued that the novel lacked psychological depth, and that Stowe, "was not so much a novelist as an impassioned pamphleteer".[121][122] Edward Rothstein has claimed that Baldwin missed the point and that the purpose of the novel was "to treat slavery not as a political issue but as an individually human one – and ultimately a challenge to Christianity itself."[122]

George Orwell in his essay "Good Bad Books", first published in Tribune in November 1945, claims that "perhaps the supreme example of the 'good bad' book is Uncle Tom's Cabin. It is an unintentionally ludicrous book, full of preposterous melodramatic incidents; it is also deeply moving and essentially true; it is hard to say which quality outweighs the other." But he concludes "I would back Uncle Tom's Cabin to outlive the complete works of Virginia Woolf or George Moore, though I know of no strictly literary test which would show where the superiority lies."[123]

The negative associations related to Uncle Tom's Cabin, in particular how the novel and associated plays created and popularized racial stereotypes, have to some extent obscured the book's historical impact as a "vital antislavery tool".[15] After the turn of the millennium, scholars such as Henry Louis Gates Jr. and Hollis Robbins have re-examined Uncle Tom's Cabin in what has been called a "serious attempt to resurrect it as both a central document in American race relations and a significant moral and political exploration of the character of those relations."[122]

Literary significance

Generally recognized as the first best-selling novel,[16] Uncle Tom's Cabin greatly influenced development of not only American literature but also protest literature in general.[16][104] Later books that owe a large debt to Uncle Tom's Cabin include The Jungle by Upton Sinclair and Silent Spring by Rachel Carson.[17]

Despite this undisputed significance, Uncle Tom's Cabin has been called "a blend of children's fable and propaganda".[124] The novel has also been dismissed by several literary critics as "merely a sentimental novel";[98] critic George Whicher stated in his Literary History of the United States that "Nothing attributable to Mrs. Stowe or her handiwork can account for the novel's enormous vogue; its author's resources as a purveyor of Sunday-school fiction were not remarkable. She had at most a ready command of broadly conceived melodrama, humor, and pathos, and of these popular sentiments she compounded her book."[100]

Other critics, though, have praised the novel. Edmund Wilson stated that "To expose oneself in maturity to Uncle Tom's Cabin may therefore prove a startling experience. It is a much more impressive work than one has ever been allowed to suspect."[125] Jane Tompkins stated that the novel is one of the classics of American literature and wonders if many literary critics dismiss the book because it was simply too popular during its day.[92]

Creation and popularization of stereotypes

 
Illustration of Sam from the 1888 "New Edition" of Uncle Tom's Cabin. The character of Sam helped create the stereotype of the lazy, carefree "happy darky".

Many modern scholars and readers have criticized the book for condescending racist descriptions of the black characters' appearances, speech, and behavior, as well as the passive nature of Uncle Tom in accepting his fate.[126] The novel's creation and use of common stereotypes about African Americans[12] is significant because Uncle Tom's Cabin was the best-selling novel in the world during the 19th century.[7] As a result, the book (along with illustrations from the book[39] and associated stage productions) played a major role in perpetuating and solidifying such stereotypes into the American psyche.[127][126] In the 1960s and 1970s, the Black Power and Black Arts Movements attacked the novel, claiming that the character of Uncle Tom engaged in "race betrayal", and that Tom made slaves out to be worse than slave owners.[122]

Among the stereotypes of blacks in Uncle Tom's Cabin[13][15] are the "happy darky" (in the lazy, carefree character of Sam); the light-skinned tragic mulatto as a sex object (in the characters of Eliza, Cassy, and Emmeline); the affectionate, dark-skinned female mammy (through several characters, including Mammy, a cook at the St. Clare plantation); the pickaninny stereotype of black children (in the character of Topsy); the Uncle Tom, an African American who is too eager to please white people. Stowe intended Tom to be a "noble hero" and a Christ-like figure who, like Jesus at his crucifixion, forgives the people responsible for his death. The false stereotype of Tom as a "subservient fool who bows down to the white man", and the resulting derogatory term "Uncle Tom", resulted from staged "Tom Shows", which sometimes replaced Tom's grim death with an upbeat ending where Tom causes his oppressors to see the error of their ways, and they all reconcile happily. Stowe had no control over these shows and their alteration of her story.[53]

Anti-Tom literature

 
Title page for Aunt Phillis's Cabin by Mary Eastman, one of many examples of anti-Tom literature

In response to Uncle Tom's Cabin, writers in the Southern United States produced a number of books to rebut Stowe's novel.[128] This so-called Anti-Tom literature generally took a pro-slavery viewpoint, arguing that the issues of slavery as depicted in Stowe's book were overblown and incorrect.[129] The novels in this genre tended to feature a benign white patriarchal master and a pure wife, both of whom presided over childlike slaves in a benevolent extended family style plantation. The novels either implied or directly stated that African Americans were a childlike people[130] unable to live their lives without being directly overseen by white people.[131]

Among the most famous anti-Tom books are The Sword and the Distaff by William Gilmore Simms, Aunt Phillis's Cabin by Mary Henderson Eastman, and The Planter's Northern Bride by Caroline Lee Hentz,[132] with the last author having been a close personal friend of Stowe's when the two lived in Cincinnati. Simms' book was published a few months after Stowe's novel, and it contains a number of sections and discussions disputing Stowe's book and her view of slavery. Hentz's 1854 novel, widely read at the time but now largely forgotten, offers a defense of slavery as seen through the eyes of a Northern woman—the daughter of an abolitionist, no less—who marries a Southern slave owner.[133]

In the decade between the publication of Uncle Tom's Cabin and the start of the American Civil War, between twenty and thirty anti-Tom books were published (although others continued to be published after the war, including The Leopard's Spots in 1902 by "professional racist" Thomas Dixon Jr.).[134] More than half of these anti-Tom books were written by white women, Simms commenting at one point about the "Seemingly poetic justice of having the Northern woman (Stowe) answered by a Southern woman."[135]

Dramatic adaptations

Plays and Tom shows

 
Scene in William A. Brady's 1901 revival of the play at the Academy of Music, New York City
 
Little Eva's death scene in Brady's 1901 revival at the Academy of Music

Even though Uncle Tom's Cabin was the best-selling novel of the 19th century, far more Americans of that time saw the story as a stage play or musical than read the book.[136] Historian Eric Lott estimated that "for every one of the three hundred thousand who bought the novel in its first year, many more eventually saw the play."[137] In 1902, it was reported that by a quarter million of these presentations had already been performed in the United States.[138]

Given the lax copyright laws of the time, stage plays based on Uncle Tom's Cabin—"Tom shows"—began to appear while the novel was still being serialized. Stowe refused to authorize dramatization of her work because of her distrust of drama (although she did eventually go to see George L. Aiken's version and, according to Francis Underwood, was "delighted" by Caroline Howard's portrayal of Topsy).[139] Aiken's stage production was the most popular play in the U.S. and England for 75 years.[103] Stowe's refusal to authorize a particular dramatic version left the field clear for any number of adaptations, some launched for (various) political reasons and others as simply commercial theatrical ventures.[140][141]

No international copyright laws existed at the time. The book and plays were translated into several languages; Stowe received no money, which could have meant as much as "three-fourths of her just and legitimate wages".[142]

All the Tom shows appear to have incorporated elements of melodrama and blackface minstrelsy.[15] These plays varied tremendously in their politics—some faithfully reflected Stowe's sentimentalized antislavery politics, while others were more moderate, or even pro-slavery.[143] Many of the productions featured demeaning racial caricatures of black people;[15] some productions also featured songs by Stephen Foster (including "My Old Kentucky Home", "Old Folks at Home", and "Massa's in the Cold Ground").[136] The best-known Tom shows were those of George Aiken and H.J. Conway.[144]

The many stage variants of Uncle Tom's Cabin "dominated northern popular culture... for several years" during the 19th century,[145] and the plays were still being performed in the early 20th century.[146]

Films

 
Still from Edwin S. Porter's 1903 version of Uncle Tom's Cabin, which was one of the first full-length movies. The still shows Eliza telling Uncle Tom that he has been sold and that she is running away to save her child.

Uncle Tom's Cabin has been adapted several times as a film. Most of these movies were created during the silent film era (Uncle Tom's Cabin was the most-filmed book of that time period).[147] Because of the continuing popularity of both the book and "Tom" shows, audiences were already familiar with the characters and the plot, making it easier for the film to be understood without spoken words.[147]

The first film version of Uncle Tom's Cabin was one of the earliest full-length movies (although full-length at that time meant between 10 and 14 minutes).[148] This 1903 film, directed by Edwin S. Porter, used white actors in blackface in the major roles and black performers only as extras. This version was evidently similar to many of the "Tom Shows" of earlier decades and featured several stereotypes about blacks (such as having the slaves dance in almost any context, including at a slave auction).[148]

In 1910, a three-reel Vitagraph Company of America production was directed by J. Stuart Blackton and adapted by Eugene Mullin. According to The Dramatic Mirror, this film was "a decided innovation" in motion pictures and "the first time an American company" released a dramatic film in three reels. Until then, full-length movies of the time were 15 minutes long and contained only one reel of film. The movie starred Florence Turner, Mary Fuller, Edwin R. Phillips, Flora Finch, Genevieve Tobin and Carlyle Blackwell, Sr.[149]

At least four more movie adaptations were created in the next two decades. The last silent film version was released in 1927. Directed by Harry A. Pollard (who played Uncle Tom in a 1913 release of Uncle Tom's Cabin), this two-hour movie was more than a year in production and was the third most expensive picture of the silent era (at a cost of $1.8 million). The black actor Charles Gilpin was originally cast in the title role, but he was fired after the studio decided his "portrayal was too aggressive".[150]

For several decades after the end of the silent film era, the subject matter of Stowe's novel was judged too sensitive for further film interpretation. In 1946, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer considered filming the story but ceased production after protests led by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.[151] Film versions were created overseas in the following decades, including a 1965 German-language version and a TV soap opera in Brazil called A Cabana do Pai Tomás, which ran for 205 episodes from July 1969 to March 1970.[152] The final film version[153] was a television broadcast in 1987, directed by Stan Lathan and adapted by John Gay. It starred Avery Brooks, Phylicia Rashad, Edward Woodward, Jenny Lewis, Samuel L. Jackson and Endyia Kinney.[154]

In addition to film adaptations, versions of Uncle Tom's Cabin have been produced in other formats, including a number of animated cartoons. Uncle Tom's Cabin also influenced movies, including The Birth of a Nation. This controversial 1915 film set the dramatic climax in a slave cabin similar to that of Uncle Tom, where several white Southerners unite with their former enemy (Yankee soldiers) to defend, according to the film's caption, their "Aryan birthright". According to scholars, this reuse of such a familiar image of a slave cabin would have resonated with, and been understood by, audiences of the time.[155][156]

See also

References

Notes

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  5. ^ de Rosa 2003, On p. 122, de Rosa quotes Tompkins 1985, p. 145 that Stowe's strategy was to destroy slavery through the "saving power of Christian love"..
  6. ^ Tompkins 1985, On p. 141, Tompkins writes "Stowe conceived her book as an instrument for bringing about the day when the world would be ruled not by force, but by Christian love.".
  7. ^ a b c DiMaggio 2014, p. 15.
  8. ^ a b Smith 2001, p. 221.
  9. ^ a b Goldner 2001, p. 82.
  10. ^ a b Stowe 1911, p. 203.
  11. ^ a b Vollaro 2009.
  12. ^ a b Hulser 2003.
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  • Shelby, Tommie (Spring 2012). "The Ethics of Uncle Tom's Children" (PDF). Critical Inquiry. 38 (3): 513–532. doi:10.1086/664549. S2CID 153830399.
  • Smylie, James H. (1995). "Uncle Tom's Cabin Revisited: the Bible, the Romantic Imagination, and the Sympathies of Christ". American Presbyterians. 73 (3): 165–175. doi:10.1177/002096437302700105. S2CID 170344119.
  • Stone, Harry (1957). "Charles Dickens and Harriet Beecher Stowe". Nineteenth-Century Fiction. 12 (3): 188–202. doi:10.2307/3044086. JSTOR 3044086.
  • Szczesiul, Anthony E. (March 1996). "The Canonization of Tom and Eva: Catholic Hagiography and Uncle Tom's Cabin". American Transcendental Quarterly. 10 (1): 59–73.
  • Vollaro, Daniel R. (Winter 2009). . Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association. 30 (1): 18–34. Archived from the original on October 15, 2009.
  • Watson, Charles S. (November 1976). "Simms's Review of Uncle Tom's Cabin". American Literature. 48 (3): 365–368. doi:10.2307/2924870. JSTOR 2924870.
  • Winship, Michael (October 1999). "The Greatest Book of Its Kind: A Publishing History of 'Uncle Tom's Cabin'" (PDF). Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society. 109 (2): 309–332.
  • Winship, Michael (2010). "The Library of Congress in 1892: Ainsworth Spofford, Houghton, Mifflin and Company, and Uncle Tom's Cabin". Libraries & the Cultural Record. 45 (1): 85–91. doi:10.1353/lac.0.0114. JSTOR 20720641. S2CID 153517304.
  • Wolff, Cynthia Griffin (1995). "Masculinity in Uncle Tom's Cabin". American Quarterly. 47 (4): 595–618. doi:10.2307/2713368. JSTOR 2713368.
  • Wright, Robert E. (Winter 2021). "Liberty Befits All: Stowe and Uncle Tom's Cabin". Independent Review. 25 (3): 385–396.

Further reading

  • Aiken, George L. (1993). Uncle Tom's Cabin. Garland.
  • Gerould, Daniel C., ed. (1983). American Melodrama. Performing Arts Journal Publications.
  • Parfait, Claire (2007). The Publishing History of Uncle's Tom's Cabin, 1852–2002. Aldershot: Ashgate.
  • Reynolds, David S. (2011). Mightier Than the Sword: Uncle Tom's Cabin and the Battle for America. W. W. Norton & Company.
  • Stowe, Harriet Beecher; Gates, Henry Louis; Robbins, Hollis (2007). The Annotated Uncle Tom's Cabin. W. W. Norton & Company.

External links

External videos
  Presentation by Reynolds on Mightier Than the Sword: Uncle Tom's Cabin and the Battle for America at the Harriet Beecher Stowe Center, May 19, 2011, C-SPAN
  • Uncle Tom's Cabin at Standard Ebooks
  • University of Virginia Web site "Uncle Tom's Cabin and American Culture: A Multi-Media Archive" – edited by Stephen Railton, covers 1830 to 1930, offering links to primary and bibliographic sources on the cultural background, various editions, and public reception of Harriet Beecher Stowe's influential novel. The site also provides the full text of the book, audio and video clips, and examples of related merchandising.
  • Uncle Tom's Cabin at Project Gutenberg
  • Uncle Tom's Cabin, available at Internet Archive. Scanned, illustrated original editions.
  •   Uncle Tom's Cabin public domain audiobook at LibriVox

uncle, cabin, this, article, about, 19th, century, novel, other, uses, disambiguation, life, among, lowly, anti, slavery, novel, american, author, harriet, beecher, stowe, published, volumes, 1852, novel, profound, effect, attitudes, toward, african, americans. This article is about the mid 19th century novel For other uses see Uncle Tom s Cabin disambiguation Uncle Tom s Cabin or Life Among the Lowly is an anti slavery novel by American author Harriet Beecher Stowe Published in two volumes in 1852 the novel had a profound effect on attitudes toward African Americans and slavery in the U S and is said to have helped lay the groundwork for the American Civil War 1 2 3 Uncle Tom s CabinTitle page for Volume I of the first edition of Uncle Tom s Cabin 1852 AuthorHarriet Beecher StoweOriginal titleUncle Tom s Cabin or Life Among the Lowly IllustratorHammatt BillingsCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishGenreNovelPublished1852 two volumes PublisherJohn P Jewett and Company after serialization in The National Era beginning June 5 1851OCLC1077982310Dewey Decimal813 3LC ClassPS2954 U5Followed byA Key to Uncle Tom s Cabin Stowe a Connecticut born woman of English descent was part of the religious Beecher family and an active abolitionist She wrote the sentimental novel to depict the reality of slavery while also asserting that Christian love could overcome slavery 4 5 6 The novel focuses on the character of Uncle Tom a long suffering black slave around whom the stories of the other characters revolve In the United States Uncle Tom s Cabin was the best selling novel and the second best selling book of the 19th century following the Bible 7 8 It is credited with helping fuel the abolitionist cause in the 1850s 9 The influence attributed to the book was so great that a likely apocryphal story arose of Abraham Lincoln meeting Stowe at the start of the Civil War and declaring So this is the little lady who started this great war 10 11 The book and the plays it inspired helped popularize a number of negative stereotypes about black people 12 13 3 including that of the namesake character Uncle Tom The term came to be associated with an excessively subservient person 14 These later associations with Uncle Tom s Cabin have to an extent overshadowed the historical effects of the book as a vital antislavery tool 15 Nonetheless the novel remains a landmark in protest literature 16 with later books such as The Jungle by Upton Sinclair and Silent Spring by Rachel Carson owing a large debt to it 17 Contents 1 Sources 2 Publication 3 Plot 3 1 Eliza escapes with her son Tom sold down the river 3 2 Eliza s family hunted Tom s life with St Clare 3 3 Tom sold to Simon Legree 3 4 Final section 4 Major characters 5 Literary themes and theories 5 1 Major themes 5 2 Literary theories 6 Style 7 Reactions to the novel 7 1 Contemporary reaction in United States and around the world 7 2 20th century and modern criticism 7 3 Literary significance 8 Creation and popularization of stereotypes 9 Anti Tom literature 10 Dramatic adaptations 10 1 Plays and Tom shows 10 2 Films 11 See also 12 References 12 1 Notes 12 2 Bibliography 13 Further reading 14 External linksSources nbsp An engraving of Harriet Beecher Stowe from 1872 based on an oil painting by Alonzo Chappel Stowe a Connecticut born teacher at the Hartford Female Seminary and an active abolitionist wrote the novel as a response to the passage in 1850 of the second Fugitive Slave Act Much of the book was composed at her house in Brunswick Maine where her husband Calvin Ellis Stowe taught at his alma mater Bowdoin College 18 19 20 Stowe was partly inspired to create Uncle Tom s Cabin by the slave narrative The Life of Josiah Henson Formerly a Slave Now an Inhabitant of Canada as Narrated by Himself 1849 21 Henson a formerly enslaved black man had lived and worked on a 3 700 acre 15 km2 plantation in North Bethesda Maryland owned by Isaac Riley 22 Henson escaped slavery in 1830 by fleeing to the Province of Upper Canada now Ontario where he helped other fugitive slaves settle and become self sufficient 22 Stowe was also inspired by the posthumous biography of Phebe Ann Jacobs a devout Congregationalist of Brunswick Maine 23 24 Born on a slave plantation in Lake Hiawatha New Jersey Jacobs was enslaved for most of her life including by the president of Bowdoin College 25 26 27 28 In her final years Jacobs lived as a free woman laundering clothes for Bowdoin students She achieved respect from her community due to her devout religious beliefs 28 and her funeral was widely attended 29 30 Another source Stowe used as research for Uncle Tom s Cabin was American Slavery as It Is Testimony of a Thousand Witnesses a volume co authored by Theodore Dwight Weld and the Grimke sisters 31 32 Stowe also conducted interviews with people who escaped slavery 33 Stowe mentioned a number of these inspirations and sources in A Key to Uncle Tom s Cabin 1853 31 This non fiction book was intended to not only verify Stowe s claims about slavery but also point readers to the many publicly available documents 31 detailing the horrors of slavery 34 35 Publication nbsp First appearance of Uncle Tom s Cabin as serialized in The National Era June 5 1851 Uncle Tom s Cabin first appeared as a 40 week serial in The National Era an abolitionist periodical starting with the June 5 1851 issue It was originally intended as a shorter narrative that would run for only a few weeks Stowe expanded the story significantly however and it was instantly popular such that protests were sent to the Era office when she missed an issue 36 The final installment was released in the April 1 1852 issue of Era Stowe arranged for the story s copyright to be registered with the United States District Court for the District of Maine She renewed her copyright in 1879 and the work entered the public domain on May 12 1893 37 While the story was still being serialized the publisher John P Jewett contracted with Stowe to turn Uncle Tom s Cabin into a book 38 Convinced the book would be popular Jewett made the unusual decision for the time to have six full page illustrations by Hammatt Billings engraved for the first printing 39 Published in book form on March 20 1852 the novel sold 3 000 copies on that day alone 36 and soon sold out its complete print run 40 In the first year after it was published 300 000 copies of the book were sold in the United States 41 Eight printing presses running incessantly could barely keep up with the demand 42 By mid 1853 sales of the book dramatically decreased 43 and Jewett went out of business during the Panic of 1857 44 In June 1860 the right to publish Uncle Tom s Cabin passed to the Boston firm Ticknor and Fields 45 which put the book back in print in November 1862 After that demand began to yet again increase 46 47 Houghton Mifflin Company acquired the rights from Ticknor in 1878 48 In 1879 a new edition of Uncle Tom s Cabin was released repackaging the novel as an American classic 47 Through the 1880s until its copyright expired the book served as a mainstay and reliable source of income for Houghton Mifflin 43 By the end of the nineteenth century the novel was widely available in a large number of editions 47 and in the United States it became the second best selling book of that century after the Bible 7 Uncle Tom s Cabin sold equally well in Britain the first London edition appeared in May 1852 and sold 200 000 copies 49 In a few years over 1 5 million copies of the book were in circulation in Britain although most of these were infringing copies a similar situation occurred in the United States 50 By 1857 the novel had been translated into 20 languages 51 Translator Lin Shu published the first Chinese translation in 1901 which was also the first American novel translated into that language 52 PlotEliza escapes with her son Tom sold down the river nbsp Full page illustration by Hammatt Billings for the first edition of Uncle Tom s Cabin 1852 Eliza tells Uncle Tom that he has been sold and she is running away to save her child The book opens with a Kentucky farmer named Arthur Shelby facing the loss of his farm because of debts Even though he and his wife Emily Shelby believe that they have a benevolent relationship with their slaves Shelby decides to raise the needed funds by selling two of them Uncle Tom a middle aged man with a wife and children and Harry the son of Emily Shelby s maid Eliza to Mr Haley a coarse slave trader Emily Shelby is averse to this idea because she had promised her maid that her child would never be sold Emily s son George Shelby hates to see Tom go because he sees the man as his friend and mentor When Eliza overhears Mr and Mrs Shelby discussing plans to sell Tom and Harry Eliza determines to run away with her son The novel states that Eliza made this decision because she fears losing her only surviving child she had already miscarried two children Eliza departs that night leaving a note of apology to her mistress She later makes a dangerous crossing over the ice of the Ohio River to escape her pursuers As Tom is sold Mr Haley takes him to a riverboat on the Mississippi River and from there Tom is to be transported to a slave market While on board Tom meets Eva an angelic little white girl They quickly become friends Eva falls into the river and Tom dives into the river to save her life Being grateful to Tom Eva s father Augustine St Clare buys him from Haley and takes him with the family to their home in New Orleans Tom and Eva begin to relate to one another because of the deep Christian faith they both share Eliza s family hunted Tom s life with St Clare nbsp Illustration of Tom and Eva by Hammatt Billings for the 1853 deluxe edition of Uncle Tom s Cabin During Eliza s escape she meets up with her husband George Harris who had run away previously They decide to attempt to reach Canada but are tracked by Tom Loker a slave hunter hired by Mr Haley Eventually Loker and his men trap Eliza and her family causing George to shoot him in the side Worried that Loker may die Eliza convinces George to bring the slave hunter to a nearby Quaker settlement for medical treatment Back in New Orleans St Clare debates slavery with his Northern cousin Ophelia who while opposing slavery is prejudiced against black people St Clare however believes he is not biased even though he is a slave owner In an attempt to show Ophelia that her prejudiced views against black people are wrong St Clare purchases Topsy a young black slave and asks Ophelia to educate her After Tom has lived with the St Clares for two years Eva grows very ill Before she dies she experiences a vision of heaven which she shares with the people around her As a result of her death and vision the other characters resolve to change their lives Ophelia promising to throw off her personal prejudices against blacks Topsy saying she will better herself and St Clare pledging to free Tom Tom sold to Simon Legree Before St Clare can follow through on his pledge he dies after being stabbed outside a tavern His wife reneges on her late husband s vow and sells Tom at auction to a vicious plantation owner named Simon Legree Tom is taken to rural Louisiana with other new slaves including Emmeline whom Simon Legree has purchased to use as a sex slave nbsp Full page illustration by Hammatt Billings for the first edition of Uncle Tom s Cabin 1852 Cassy another of Legree s slaves ministers to Uncle Tom after his whipping Legree begins to hate Tom when Tom refuses Legree s order to whip his fellow slave Legree beats Tom viciously and resolves to crush his new slave s faith in God Despite Legree s cruelty Tom refuses to stop reading his Bible and comforting the other slaves as best he can While at the plantation Tom meets Cassy another slave whom Legree used as a sex slave Cassy tells her story to Tom She was previously separated from her son and daughter when they were sold She became pregnant again but killed the child because she could not tolerate having another child separated from her Tom Loker changed after being healed by the Quakers returns to the story He has helped George Eliza and Harry enter Canada from Lake Erie and become free In Louisiana Uncle Tom almost succumbs to hopelessness as his faith in God is tested by the hardships of the plantation He has two visions one of Jesus and one of Eva which renew his resolve to remain a faithful Christian even unto death He encourages Cassy to escape which she does taking Emmeline with her When Tom refuses to tell Legree where Cassy and Emmeline have gone Legree orders his overseers to kill Tom As Tom is dying he forgives the overseers who savagely beat him Humbled by the character of the man they have killed both men become Christians George Shelby Arthur Shelby s son arrives to buy Tom s freedom but Tom dies shortly after they meet Final section On their boat ride to freedom Cassy and Emmeline meet George Harris sister Madame de Thoux and accompany her to Canada Madame de Thoux and George Harris were separated in their childhood Cassy discovers that Eliza is her long lost daughter who was sold as a child Now that their family is together again they travel to France and eventually Liberia the African nation created for former American slaves George Shelby returns to the Kentucky farm where after his father s death he frees all his slaves George Shelby urges them to remember Tom s sacrifice every time they look at his cabin He decides to lead a pious Christian life just as Uncle Tom did Major characters nbsp Simon Legree assaults Uncle Tom nbsp Uncle Tom and Little Eva painting by Edwin Longsden Long 1866 Uncle Tom the title character was initially seen as a noble long suffering Christian slave 14 In more recent years his name has become an epithet directed towards African Americans who are accused of selling out to whites 14 Stowe intended Tom to be a noble hero and a praiseworthy person 53 Throughout the book far from allowing himself to be exploited Tom stands up for his beliefs and refuses to betray friends and family 14 Eliza is an enslaved personal maid to Mrs Shelby who escapes to the North with her five year old son Harry after he is sold to Mr Haley Her husband George eventually finds Eliza and Harry in Ohio and emigrates with them to Canada then France and finally Liberia 54 The character Eliza was inspired by an account given at Lane Theological Seminary in Cincinnati by John Rankin to Stowe s husband Calvin a professor at the school According to Rankin in February 1838 a young slave woman Eliza Harris had escaped across the frozen Ohio River to the town of Ripley with her child in her arms and stayed at his house on her way farther north 55 Evangeline Eva St Clare is the daughter of Augustine St Clare Eva enters the narrative when Uncle Tom is traveling via steamship to New Orleans to be sold and he rescues the five or six year old girl from drowning Eva begs her father to buy Tom and he becomes the head coachman at the St Clare house He spends most of his time with the angelic Eva Eva often talks about love and forgiveness convincing the dour slave girl Topsy that she deserves love She even touches the heart of her Aunt Ophelia 56 Eventually Eva falls terminally ill Before dying she gives a lock of her hair to each of the slaves telling them that they must become Christians so that they may see each other in Heaven On her deathbed she convinces her father to free Tom but because of circumstances the promise never materializes 57 Simon Legree is a cruel slave owner a Northerner by birth whose name has become synonymous with greed and cruelty 58 He is arguably the novel s main antagonist His goal is to demoralize Tom and break him of his religious faith he eventually orders Tom whipped to death out of frustration for his slave s unbreakable belief in God The novel reveals that as a young man he had abandoned his sickly mother for a life at sea and ignored her letter to see her one last time at her deathbed He sexually exploits Cassy who despises him and later sets his designs on Emmeline 59 It is unclear if Legree is based on any actual individuals Reports surfaced in the late 1800s that Stowe had in mind a wealthy cotton and sugar plantation owner named Meredith Calhoun 60 61 who settled on the Red River north of Alexandria Louisiana 62 Rev Josiah Henson inspiration for the character of Uncle Tom said that Legree was modeled after Bryce Lytton 63 who broke my arm and maimed me for life 64 Literary themes and theoriesMajor themes Uncle Tom s Cabin is dominated by a single theme the evil and immorality of slavery 65 While Stowe weaves other subthemes throughout her text such as the moral authority of motherhood and the power of Christian love 4 she emphasizes the connections between these and the horrors of slavery Stowe sometimes changed the story s voice so she could give a homily on the destructive nature of slavery 66 such as when a white woman on the steamboat carrying Tom further south states The most dreadful part of slavery to my mind is its outrages of feelings and affections the separating of families for example 67 One way Stowe showed the evil of slavery 49 was how this peculiar institution forcibly separated families from each other 68 nbsp The fugitives are safe in a free land Illustration by Hammatt Billings for Uncle Tom s Cabin first edition The image shows George Harris Eliza Harry and Mrs Smyth after they escape to freedom One of the subthemes presented in the novel is temperance 69 Stowe made it somewhat subtle and in some cases she wove it into events that would also support the dominant theme One example of this is when Augustine St Clare is killed he attempted to stop a brawl between two inebriated men in a cafe and was stabbed Another example is the death of Prue who was whipped to death for being drunk on a consistent basis however her reasons for doing so is due to the loss of her baby In the opening of the novel the fates of Eliza and her son are being discussed between slave owners over wine Considering that Stowe intended this to be a subtheme this scene could foreshadow future events that put alcohol in a bad light 70 Because Stowe saw motherhood as the ethical and structural model for all of American life 71 and also believed that only women had the moral authority to save 72 the United States from the demon of slavery another major theme of Uncle Tom s Cabin is the moral power and sanctity of women 73 Through characters like Eliza who escapes from slavery to save her young son and eventually reunites her entire family or Eva who is seen as the ideal Christian 74 Stowe shows how she believed women could save those around them from even the worst injustices Though later critics have noted that Stowe s female characters are often domestic cliches instead of realistic women 75 Stowe s novel reaffirmed the importance of women s influence and helped pave the way for the women s rights movement in the following decades 76 Stowe s puritanical religious beliefs show up in the novel s final overarching theme the exploration of the nature of Christian love 4 77 and how she feels Christian theology is fundamentally incompatible with slavery 78 This theme is most evident when Tom urges St Clare to look away to Jesus after the death of St Clare s beloved daughter Eva After Tom dies George Shelby eulogizes Tom by saying What a thing it is to be a Christian 79 Because Christian themes play such a large role in Uncle Tom s Cabin and because of Stowe s frequent use of direct authorial interjections on religion and faith the novel often takes the form of a sermon 80 Literary theories Over the years scholars have postulated a number of theories about what Stowe was trying to say with the novel aside from the major theme of condemning slavery For example as an ardent Christian and active abolitionist Stowe placed many of her religious beliefs into the novel 81 Some scholars have stated that Stowe saw her novel as offering a solution to the moral and political dilemma that troubled many slavery opponents whether engaging in prohibited behavior was justified in opposing evil Was the use of violence to oppose the violence of slavery and the breaking of proslavery laws morally defensible 82 Which of Stowe s characters should be emulated the passive Uncle Tom or the defiant George Harris 83 Stowe s solution was similar to Ralph Waldo Emerson s God s will would be followed if each person sincerely examined his principles and acted on them 84 Scholars have also seen the novel as expressing the values and ideas of the Free Will Movement 85 In this view the character of George Harris embodies the principles of free labor and the complex character of Ophelia represents those Northerners who condoned compromise with slavery In contrast to Ophelia is Dinah who operates on passion During the course of the novel Ophelia is transformed just as the Republican Party three years later proclaimed that the North must transform itself and stand up for its antislavery principles 86 Feminist theory can also be seen at play in Stowe s book with the novel as a critique of the patriarchal nature of slavery 87 For Stowe blood relations rather than paternalistic relations between masters and slaves formed the basis of families Moreover Stowe viewed national solidarity as an extension of a person s family thus feelings of nationality stemmed from possessing a shared race Consequently she advocated African colonization for freed slaves and not amalgamation into American society 88 The book has also been seen as an attempt to redefine masculinity as a necessary step toward the abolition of slavery 89 In this view abolitionists had begun to resist the vision of aggressive and dominant men that the conquest and colonization of the early 19th century had fostered To change the notion of manhood so that men could oppose slavery without jeopardizing their self image or their standing in society some abolitionists drew on principles of women s suffrage and Christianity as well as passivism and praised men for cooperation compassion and civic spirit Others within the abolitionist movement argued for conventional aggressive masculine action All the men in Stowe s novel are representations of either one kind of man or the other 90 Style nbsp Eliza crossing the icy river in an 1881 theatre poster Uncle Tom s Cabin is written in the sentimental 3 91 and melodramatic style common to 19th century sentimental novels 8 and domestic fiction also called women s fiction These genres were the most popular novels of Stowe s time and were written by for and about women 92 along with featuring a writing style that evoked a reader s sympathy and emotion 93 Uncle Tom s Cabin has been called a representative example of a sentimental novel 94 The power in this type of writing can be seen in the reaction of contemporary readers Georgiana May a friend of Stowe s wrote a letter to the author saying I was up last night long after one o clock reading and finishing Uncle Tom s Cabin I could not leave it any more than I could have left a dying child 95 Another reader is described as obsessing on the book at all hours and having considered renaming her daughter Eva 96 Evidently the death of Little Eva affected a lot of people at that time because in 1852 300 baby girls in Boston alone were given that name 96 Despite this positive reaction from readers for decades literary critics dismissed the style found in Uncle Tom s Cabin and other sentimental novels because these books were written by women and so prominently featured what one critic called women s sloppy emotions 97 Another literary critic said that had the novel not been about slavery it would be just another sentimental novel 98 and another described the book as primarily a derivative piece of hack work 99 In The Literary History of the United States George F Whicher called Uncle Tom s Cabin Sunday school fiction full of broadly conceived melodrama humor and pathos 100 In 1985 Jane Tompkins expressed a different view with her famous defense of the book in Sentimental Power Uncle Tom s Cabin and the Politics of Literary History 97 101 Tompkins praised the style so many other critics had dismissed writing that sentimental novels showed how women s emotions had the power to change the world for the better She also said that the popular domestic novels of the 19th century including Uncle Tom s Cabin were remarkable for their intellectual complexity ambition and resourcefulness and that Uncle Tom s Cabin offers a critique of American society far more devastating than any delivered by better known critics such as Hawthorne and Melville 102 Reactions to the novelUncle Tom s Cabin has exerted an influence equaled by few other novels in history 102 103 Upon publication Uncle Tom s Cabin ignited a firestorm of protest from defenders of slavery who created a number of books in response to the novel while the book elicited praise from abolitionists The novel is considered an influential 104 landmark of protest literature 16 Contemporary reaction in United States and around the world nbsp Stowe responded to criticism by writing A Key to Uncle Tom s Cabin 1853 documenting the veracity of her novel s depiction of slavery Uncle Tom s Cabin had an incalculable 102 impact on the 19th century world and captured the imagination of many Americans In a likely apocryphal story that alludes to the novel s impact when Abraham Lincoln met Stowe in 1862 he supposedly commented So this is the little lady who started this great war 10 11 105 Historians are undecided if Lincoln actually said this line and in a letter that Stowe wrote to her husband a few hours after meeting with Lincoln no mention of this comment was made 106 Many writers have also credited the novel with focusing Northern anger at the injustices of slavery and the Fugitive Slave Law 106 and helping to fuel the abolitionist movement 9 3 Union general and politician James Baird Weaver said that the book convinced him to become active in the abolitionist movement 107 Frederick Douglass was convinced both of the social uses of the novel and of Stowe s humanitarianism and heavily promoted the novel in his newspaper during the book s initial release 108 Though Douglass said Uncle Tom s Cabin was a work of marvelous depth and power he also published criticism of the novel most prominently by Martin Delany In a series of letters in the paper Delany accused Stowe of borrowing and thus profiting from the work of black writers to compose her novel and chastised Stowe for her apparent support of black colonization to Africa 108 Martin was one of the most out spoken black critics of Uncle Tom s Cabin at the time and later wrote Blake or the Huts of America a novel where an African American chooses violent rebellion over Tom s resignation 109 White people in the American South were outraged at the novel s release 49 with the book also roundly criticized by slavery supporters 35 Southern novelist William Gilmore Simms declared the work utterly false 110 while also calling it slanderous 111 Reactions ranged from a bookseller in Mobile Alabama being forced to leave town for selling the novel 49 to threatening letters sent to Stowe including a package containing a slave s severed ear 49 Many Southern writers like Simms soon wrote their own books in opposition to Stowe s novel 112 Some critics highlighted Stowe s paucity of life experience relating to Southern life saying that it led her to create inaccurate descriptions of the region For instance she had never been to a Southern plantation Stowe always said she based the characters of her book on stories she was told by runaway slaves in Cincinnati It is reported that She observed firsthand several incidents which galvanized her to write the famous anti slavery novel Scenes she observed on the Ohio River including seeing a husband and wife being sold apart as well as newspaper and magazine accounts and interviews contributed material to the emerging plot 113 In response to these criticisms in 1853 Stowe published A Key to Uncle Tom s Cabin an attempt to document the veracity of the novel s depiction of slavery 31 In the book Stowe discusses each of the major characters in Uncle Tom s Cabin and cites real life equivalents to them while also mounting a more aggressive attack on slavery in the South than the novel itself had 34 Like the novel A Key to Uncle Tom s Cabin was a best seller but although Stowe claimed A Key to Uncle Tom s Cabin documented her previously consulted sources she actually read many of the cited works only after the publication of her novel 34 nbsp A sculpture after an 1869 design by Louis Samain was installed in 1895 on Avenue Louise in Brussels The scene a runaway black slave and child attacked by dogs was inspired by Uncle Tom s Cabin Uncle Tom s Cabin also created great interest in the United Kingdom The first London edition appeared in May 1852 and sold 200 000 copies 49 Some of this interest was because of British antipathy to America As one prominent writer explained The evil passions which Uncle Tom gratified in England were not hatred or vengeance of slavery but national jealousy and national vanity We have long been smarting under the conceit of America we are tired of hearing her boast that she is the freest and the most enlightened country that the world has ever seen Our clergy hate her voluntary system our Tories hate her democrats our Whigs hate her parvenus our Radicals hate her litigiousness her insolence and her ambition All parties hailed Mrs Stowe as a revolter from the enemy 114 Charles Francis Adams the American minister to Britain during the war argued later that Uncle Tom s Cabin or Life among the Lowly published in 1852 exercised largely from fortuitous circumstances a more immediate considerable and dramatic world influence than any other book ever printed 115 Stowe sent a copy of the book to Charles Dickens who wrote her in response I have read your book with the deepest interest and sympathy and admire more than I can express to you both the generous feeling which inspired it and the admirable power with which it is executed 116 The historian and politician Thomas Babington Macaulay wrote in 1852 that it is the most valuable addition that America has made to English literature 117 20th century and modern criticism In the 20th century a number of writers attacked Uncle Tom s Cabin not only for the stereotypes the novel had created about African Americans but also because of the utter disdain of the Tom character by the black community 118 These writers included Richard Wright with his collection Uncle Tom s Children 1938 and Chester Himes with his 1943 short story Heaven Has Changed 118 Ralph Ellison also critiqued the book with his 1952 novel Invisible Man with Ellison figuratively killing Uncle Tom in the opening chapter 118 nbsp Uncle Tom and Eva mass market Staffordshire figure England 1855 1860 glazed and painted earthenware In 1945 James Baldwin published his influential and infamous critical essay Everbody s Protest Novel 119 In the essay Baldwin described Uncle Tom s Cabin as a bad novel having in its self righteousness virtuous sentimentality 120 He argued that the novel lacked psychological depth and that Stowe was not so much a novelist as an impassioned pamphleteer 121 122 Edward Rothstein has claimed that Baldwin missed the point and that the purpose of the novel was to treat slavery not as a political issue but as an individually human one and ultimately a challenge to Christianity itself 122 George Orwell in his essay Good Bad Books first published in Tribune in November 1945 claims that perhaps the supreme example of the good bad book is Uncle Tom s Cabin It is an unintentionally ludicrous book full of preposterous melodramatic incidents it is also deeply moving and essentially true it is hard to say which quality outweighs the other But he concludes I would back Uncle Tom s Cabin to outlive the complete works of Virginia Woolf or George Moore though I know of no strictly literary test which would show where the superiority lies 123 The negative associations related to Uncle Tom s Cabin in particular how the novel and associated plays created and popularized racial stereotypes have to some extent obscured the book s historical impact as a vital antislavery tool 15 After the turn of the millennium scholars such as Henry Louis Gates Jr and Hollis Robbins have re examined Uncle Tom s Cabin in what has been called a serious attempt to resurrect it as both a central document in American race relations and a significant moral and political exploration of the character of those relations 122 Literary significance Generally recognized as the first best selling novel 16 Uncle Tom s Cabin greatly influenced development of not only American literature but also protest literature in general 16 104 Later books that owe a large debt to Uncle Tom s Cabin include The Jungle by Upton Sinclair and Silent Spring by Rachel Carson 17 Despite this undisputed significance Uncle Tom s Cabin has been called a blend of children s fable and propaganda 124 The novel has also been dismissed by several literary critics as merely a sentimental novel 98 critic George Whicher stated in his Literary History of the United States that Nothing attributable to Mrs Stowe or her handiwork can account for the novel s enormous vogue its author s resources as a purveyor of Sunday school fiction were not remarkable She had at most a ready command of broadly conceived melodrama humor and pathos and of these popular sentiments she compounded her book 100 Other critics though have praised the novel Edmund Wilson stated that To expose oneself in maturity to Uncle Tom s Cabin may therefore prove a startling experience It is a much more impressive work than one has ever been allowed to suspect 125 Jane Tompkins stated that the novel is one of the classics of American literature and wonders if many literary critics dismiss the book because it was simply too popular during its day 92 Creation and popularization of stereotypes nbsp Illustration of Sam from the 1888 New Edition of Uncle Tom s Cabin The character of Sam helped create the stereotype of the lazy carefree happy darky Many modern scholars and readers have criticized the book for condescending racist descriptions of the black characters appearances speech and behavior as well as the passive nature of Uncle Tom in accepting his fate 126 The novel s creation and use of common stereotypes about African Americans 12 is significant because Uncle Tom s Cabin was the best selling novel in the world during the 19th century 7 As a result the book along with illustrations from the book 39 and associated stage productions played a major role in perpetuating and solidifying such stereotypes into the American psyche 127 126 In the 1960s and 1970s the Black Power and Black Arts Movements attacked the novel claiming that the character of Uncle Tom engaged in race betrayal and that Tom made slaves out to be worse than slave owners 122 Among the stereotypes of blacks in Uncle Tom s Cabin 13 15 are the happy darky in the lazy carefree character of Sam the light skinned tragic mulatto as a sex object in the characters of Eliza Cassy and Emmeline the affectionate dark skinned female mammy through several characters including Mammy a cook at the St Clare plantation the pickaninny stereotype of black children in the character of Topsy the Uncle Tom an African American who is too eager to please white people Stowe intended Tom to be a noble hero and a Christ like figure who like Jesus at his crucifixion forgives the people responsible for his death The false stereotype of Tom as a subservient fool who bows down to the white man and the resulting derogatory term Uncle Tom resulted from staged Tom Shows which sometimes replaced Tom s grim death with an upbeat ending where Tom causes his oppressors to see the error of their ways and they all reconcile happily Stowe had no control over these shows and their alteration of her story 53 Anti Tom literatureMain article Anti Tom literature nbsp Title page for Aunt Phillis s Cabin by Mary Eastman one of many examples of anti Tom literature In response to Uncle Tom s Cabin writers in the Southern United States produced a number of books to rebut Stowe s novel 128 This so called Anti Tom literature generally took a pro slavery viewpoint arguing that the issues of slavery as depicted in Stowe s book were overblown and incorrect 129 The novels in this genre tended to feature a benign white patriarchal master and a pure wife both of whom presided over childlike slaves in a benevolent extended family style plantation The novels either implied or directly stated that African Americans were a childlike people 130 unable to live their lives without being directly overseen by white people 131 Among the most famous anti Tom books are The Sword and the Distaff by William Gilmore Simms Aunt Phillis s Cabin by Mary Henderson Eastman and The Planter s Northern Bride by Caroline Lee Hentz 132 with the last author having been a close personal friend of Stowe s when the two lived in Cincinnati Simms book was published a few months after Stowe s novel and it contains a number of sections and discussions disputing Stowe s book and her view of slavery Hentz s 1854 novel widely read at the time but now largely forgotten offers a defense of slavery as seen through the eyes of a Northern woman the daughter of an abolitionist no less who marries a Southern slave owner 133 In the decade between the publication of Uncle Tom s Cabin and the start of the American Civil War between twenty and thirty anti Tom books were published although others continued to be published after the war including The Leopard s Spots in 1902 by professional racist Thomas Dixon Jr 134 More than half of these anti Tom books were written by white women Simms commenting at one point about the Seemingly poetic justice of having the Northern woman Stowe answered by a Southern woman 135 Dramatic adaptationsPlays and Tom shows Main article Tom show nbsp Scene in William A Brady s 1901 revival of the play at the Academy of Music New York City nbsp Little Eva s death scene in Brady s 1901 revival at the Academy of Music Even though Uncle Tom s Cabin was the best selling novel of the 19th century far more Americans of that time saw the story as a stage play or musical than read the book 136 Historian Eric Lott estimated that for every one of the three hundred thousand who bought the novel in its first year many more eventually saw the play 137 In 1902 it was reported that by a quarter million of these presentations had already been performed in the United States 138 Given the lax copyright laws of the time stage plays based on Uncle Tom s Cabin Tom shows began to appear while the novel was still being serialized Stowe refused to authorize dramatization of her work because of her distrust of drama although she did eventually go to see George L Aiken s version and according to Francis Underwood was delighted by Caroline Howard s portrayal of Topsy 139 Aiken s stage production was the most popular play in the U S and England for 75 years 103 Stowe s refusal to authorize a particular dramatic version left the field clear for any number of adaptations some launched for various political reasons and others as simply commercial theatrical ventures 140 141 No international copyright laws existed at the time The book and plays were translated into several languages Stowe received no money which could have meant as much as three fourths of her just and legitimate wages 142 All the Tom shows appear to have incorporated elements of melodrama and blackface minstrelsy 15 These plays varied tremendously in their politics some faithfully reflected Stowe s sentimentalized antislavery politics while others were more moderate or even pro slavery 143 Many of the productions featured demeaning racial caricatures of black people 15 some productions also featured songs by Stephen Foster including My Old Kentucky Home Old Folks at Home and Massa s in the Cold Ground 136 The best known Tom shows were those of George Aiken and H J Conway 144 The many stage variants of Uncle Tom s Cabin dominated northern popular culture for several years during the 19th century 145 and the plays were still being performed in the early 20th century 146 Films Main article Film adaptations of Uncle Tom s Cabin nbsp Still from Edwin S Porter s 1903 version of Uncle Tom s Cabin which was one of the first full length movies The still shows Eliza telling Uncle Tom that he has been sold and that she is running away to save her child Uncle Tom s Cabin has been adapted several times as a film Most of these movies were created during the silent film era Uncle Tom s Cabin was the most filmed book of that time period 147 Because of the continuing popularity of both the book and Tom shows audiences were already familiar with the characters and the plot making it easier for the film to be understood without spoken words 147 The first film version of Uncle Tom s Cabin was one of the earliest full length movies although full length at that time meant between 10 and 14 minutes 148 This 1903 film directed by Edwin S Porter used white actors in blackface in the major roles and black performers only as extras This version was evidently similar to many of the Tom Shows of earlier decades and featured several stereotypes about blacks such as having the slaves dance in almost any context including at a slave auction 148 In 1910 a three reel Vitagraph Company of America production was directed by J Stuart Blackton and adapted by Eugene Mullin According to The Dramatic Mirror this film was a decided innovation in motion pictures and the first time an American company released a dramatic film in three reels Until then full length movies of the time were 15 minutes long and contained only one reel of film The movie starred Florence Turner Mary Fuller Edwin R Phillips Flora Finch Genevieve Tobin and Carlyle Blackwell Sr 149 At least four more movie adaptations were created in the next two decades The last silent film version was released in 1927 Directed by Harry A Pollard who played Uncle Tom in a 1913 release of Uncle Tom s Cabin this two hour movie was more than a year in production and was the third most expensive picture of the silent era at a cost of 1 8 million The black actor Charles Gilpin was originally cast in the title role but he was fired after the studio decided his portrayal was too aggressive 150 For several decades after the end of the silent film era the subject matter of Stowe s novel was judged too sensitive for further film interpretation In 1946 Metro Goldwyn Mayer considered filming the story but ceased production after protests led by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 151 Film versions were created overseas in the following decades including a 1965 German language version and a TV soap opera in Brazil called A Cabana do Pai Tomas which ran for 205 episodes from July 1969 to March 1970 152 The final film version 153 was a television broadcast in 1987 directed by Stan Lathan and adapted by John Gay It starred Avery Brooks Phylicia Rashad Edward Woodward Jenny Lewis Samuel L Jackson and Endyia Kinney 154 In addition to film adaptations versions of Uncle Tom s Cabin have been produced in other formats including a number of animated cartoons Uncle Tom s Cabin also influenced movies including The Birth of a Nation This controversial 1915 film set the dramatic climax in a slave cabin similar to that of Uncle Tom where several white Southerners unite with their former enemy Yankee soldiers to defend according to the film s caption their Aryan birthright According to scholars this reuse of such a familiar image of a slave cabin would have resonated with and been understood by audiences of the time 155 156 See alsoHistory of slavery in the United States Origins of the American Civil War Ramona an 1884 novel that attempted to do for Native Americans in California what Uncle Tom s Cabin had done for African Americans Timeline of the civil rights movementReferencesNotes Kaufman 2006 p 18 Painter 2000 p 245 a b c d DeLombard 2012 a b c Kurian 2010 p 580 de Rosa 2003 On p 122 de Rosa quotes Tompkins 1985 p 145 that Stowe s strategy was to destroy slavery through the saving power of Christian love Tompkins 1985 On p 141 Tompkins writes Stowe conceived her book as an instrument for bringing about the day when the world would be ruled not by force but by Christian love a b c DiMaggio 2014 p 15 a b Smith 2001 p 221 a b Goldner 2001 p 82 a b Stowe 1911 p 203 a b Vollaro 2009 a b Hulser 2003 a b Jamieson 2018 p a b c d Jones 2019 pp 1465 1467 a b c d e Appiah amp Gates 2005 p 544 a b c d Smith 2008 p 161 a b Weinstein 2004 p 13 Winship 1999 p 310 Gatta 2015 p 500 Harriet Beecher Stowe House National Park Service Retrieved March 10 2022 Oertel 2020 p 465 a b Vicary Elizabeth Zoe January 12 2006 Henson Josiah 15 June 1789 05 May 1883 American National Biography Online Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 anb 9780198606697 article 1500325 ISBN 978 0 19 860669 7 Retrieved April 23 2022 Hovet 1979 p 270 Summary of Narrative of Phebe Ann Jacobs docsouth unc edu Retrieved November 25 2021 Hovet 1979 pp 267 68 Mrs T C Upham Narrative of Phebe Ann Jacobs docsouth unc edu Retrieved February 10 2022 Society New Jersey Historical 1919 Proceedings of the New Jersey Historical Society New Jersey Historical Society a b Narrative of Phebe Ann Jacobs or Happy Phebe by Mrs T C Upham c 1850 Bowdoin College Museum of Art There Is a Woman in Every Color Black Women in Art January 28 2021 Retrieved July 21 2022 Old David TreadwellJust a Little June 18 2021 David Treadwell Pine Grove Cemetery celebrates 200th anniversary Press Herald Retrieved July 21 2022 Upham T C 1850 Narrative of Phebe Ann Jacobs J S Stewart a b c d Ashland 2020 Weld Theodore Dwight Sixth ed The Columbia Encyclopedia 2001 2005 Archived from the original on February 25 2009 Retrieved May 15 2007 Snodgrass 2015 p 256 a b c Stowe 1854 a b Eschner Kat March 20 2017 White Southerners Said Uncle Tom s Cabin Was Fake News So its author published a key to what s true in the novel Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved March 10 2022 a b Applegate 2006 p 261 Winship 2010 pp 86 87 Winship 1999 p 313 a b First Edition Illustrations Uncle Tom s Cabin and American Culture a Multi Media Archive Department of English University of Virginia Retrieved February 21 2022 Winship 1999 p 314 Wheatcroft Geoffrey July 3 2011 The Cousins War review of Amanda Foreman A World on Fire The New York Times Book Review p 1 Nudelman 2004 p 19 a b Winship 2010 p 86 Winship 1999 p 323 Winship 1999 p 324 Winship 1999 pp 324 325 a b c Winship Michael 2007 Uncle Tom s Cabin History of the Book in the 19th Century United States Uncle Tom s Cabin and American Culture a Multi Media Archive Department of English University of Virginia Retrieved February 21 2022 Derived from a presentation at the June 2007 Uncle Tom s Cabin in the Web of Culture conference sponsored by the National Endowment for the Humanities and presented by the Harriet Beecher Stowe Center Hartford CT and the Uncle Tom s Cabin amp American Culture Project at the University of Virginia Winship 2010 p 85 a b c d e f Slave narratives and Uncle Tom s Cabin Africans in America PBS Retrieved February 16 2007 Holohan 2011 pp 27 28 Uncle Tom s Cabin A 19th Century Bestseller The University of Alabama Retrieved June 14 2012 Jie 1993 p 522 a b Rosenthal 2003 p 31 Castronovo 2014 p 147 Hagedorn 2002 pp 135 139 Szczesiul 1996 pp 66 68 Wright 2021 p 387 Louis amp DeSimone 2014 p 102 Berman 2000 pp 332 335 Foner Eric March 30 2008 Reconstructing Reconstruction The Washington Post p E03 Keith 2009 pp 27 29 Keith 2009 pp 26 27 Brandt 1990 p 23 Jaynes 2005 p 834 Allen 2004 p 24 states that Stowe held specific beliefs about the evils of slavery and the role of Americans in resisting it The book then quotes Ann Douglas describing how Stowe saw slavery as a sin McPherson 1997 p 30 Stowe Harriet Beecher 1991 Uncle Tom s Cabin Modern Library ed Vintage Books p 150 ISBN 978 0679602002 McPherson 1997 p 29 Cordell 2008 p 4 Cordell 2008 pp 8 9 Ammons 1986 p 159 Jordan Lake 2005 p 61 Wolff 1995 p 615 Vrettos 1995 p 101 Lowance Westbrook amp De Prospo 1994 p 132 Eisenmann 1998 p 3 Sorett 2016 p 125 Larsen 2000 pp 386 387 Larsen 2000 p 387 Bercovitch amp Patell 1994 p 119 Smylie 1995 pp 165 167 Bellin 1993 p 277 Bellin 1993 p 275 Bellin 1993 p 290 Grant 1998 pp 430 431 Grant 1998 pp 433 436 Riss 1994 p 525 Powell 2021 pp 107 108 Wolff 1995 pp 599 600 Wolff 1995 p 610 Noble 2003 p 58 a b Tompkins 1985 pp 124 125 Domestic or Sentimental Fiction 1820 1865 Washington State University Retrieved April 26 2007 Tompkins 1985 p 125 Badia amp Phegley 2005 p 67 a b Badia amp Phegley 2005 p 66 a b Rosenthal 2003 p 42 a b Gossett 1978 pp 123 124 Nichols 1958 p 328 a b Tompkins 1985 p 126 Halpern 2011 p 56 a b c Tompkins 1985 p 124 a b Robbins Hollis Uncle Tom s Cabin and the Matter of Influence Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History Archived from the original on November 10 2010 Retrieved December 24 2011 a b Kabatchnik 2017 p 269 Painter 2000 pp 245 246 a b Claybaugh 2003 p xvii Arnett 1920 pp 154 157 a b Shreve Grant January 29 2018 Frederick Douglass s Feud Over Uncle Tom s Cabin JSTOR Daily Retrieved March 10 2022 Stand still and see the salvation Uncle Tom s Cabin and American Culture a Multi Media Archive Department of English University of Virginia Retrieved February 20 2022 Watson 1976 pp 365 368 Brophy 1995 1996 p 496 Ridgely 1960 The Classic Text Harriett Beecher Stowe University of Wisconsin Milwaukee Library Archived from the original on May 16 2008 Retrieved March 10 2022 Adams 1958 quoting Nassau Senior on p 33 Adams 1913 p 79 Stone 1957 p 188 Rubinstein 2011 p 140 a b c Dinerstein 2009 p 83 Shelby 2012 p 515 Baldwin 2017 p 1 Baldwin 2017 p 2 a b c d Rothstein Edward October 23 2006 Digging Through the Literary Anthropology of Stowe s Uncle Tom The New York Times Retrieved March 10 2022 Orwell 1968 p 21 Wellington Darryl Lorenzo December 25 2006 Uncle Tom s Shadow The Nation Archived from the original on March 31 2019 Retrieved October 18 2020 Wilson 1962 p 134 a b Smith 1988 p 53 Jamieson 2018 p 331 Glowacki 2015 p 14 Cordell 2008 p 9 Williams 2001 p 113 Jordan Lake 2005 p 120 Beidler 2005 p 29 Cuenca 1997 1998 p 90 Benbow 2010 p 510 Gates 1987 p 134 a b People amp Events Uncle Tom s Cabin Takes the Nation by Storm Stephen Foster The American Experience PBS Archived from the original on February 26 2017 Retrieved April 19 2007 Lott 2013 p 218 Frick 2016 p xiv Lott 2013 p 228 Griffiths 2016 p 76 Buinicki 2006 p 77 Reese 2007 p 143 Lott 2013 p 219 Lott 2013 p 220 Lott 2013 p 222 Derr Holly L September 4 2013 The Pervading Influence of Uncle Tom s Cabin in Pop Culture The Atlantic Retrieved March 10 2022 a b Uncle Tom s Cabin on Film Uncle Tom s Cabin and American Culture a Multi Media Archive Department of English University of Virginia Archived from the original on May 10 2008 Retrieved February 21 2022 a b The First Uncle Tom s Cabin Film Edison Porter s Slavery Days 1903 Uncle Tom s Cabin and American Culture a Multi Media Archive Department of English University of Virginia Archived from the original on March 13 2007 Retrieved February 21 2022 The 3 Reel Vitagraph Production 1910 Uncle Tom s Cabin and American Culture a Multi Media Archive Department of English University of Virginia Archived from the original on October 13 2007 Retrieved February 21 2022 Universal Super Jewel Production 1927 Uncle Tom s Cabin and American Culture a Multi Media Archive Department of English University of Virginia Retrieved February 21 2022 Uncle Tom s Cabin in Hollywood 1929 1956 Uncle Tom s Cabin and American Culture a Multi Media Archive Department of English University of Virginia Retrieved February 21 2022 Jackson 2017 p 106 Frick 2016 p xviii Hamilton 2002 p 25 Williams 2001 p 115 H B Stowe s Cabin in D W Griffith s Movie Uncle Tom s Cabin and American Culture a Multi Media Archive Department of English University of Virginia Retrieved February 21 2022 Bibliography Books Adams Charles Francis 1913 Trans Atlantic Historical Solidarity Lectures Delivered before the University of Oxford in Easter and Trinity Terms The Clarendon Press ISBN 978 1331302445 Adams Ephraim Douglass 1958 Great Britain and the American Civil War Russell amp Russell ISBN 978 0846201021 Allen John 2004 Homelessness in American Literature Romanticism Realism and Testimony Routledge ISBN 978 0415945899 Ammons Elizabeth 1986 Stowe s Dream of the Mother Savior Uncle Tom s Cabin and American Women Writers Before the 1920s In Sundquist Eric J ed New Essays on Uncle Tom s Cabin Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521302036 Applegate Debby 2006 The Most Famous Man in America The Biography of Henry Ward Beecher Three Leaves Press ISBN 978 0385513975 Appiah Kwame Anthony Gates Henry Louis 2005 Africana Arts and Letters an A to Z reference of writers musicians and artists of the African American Experience Running Press ISBN 978 1422392232 Badia Janet Badia Phegley Jennifer 2005 Reading Women Literary Figures and Cultural Icons from the Victorian Age to the Present University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0802094872 Baldwin James 2017 Notes of a Native Son Penguin ISBN 978 0141987279 Bercovitch Sacvan Patell Cyrus R K 1994 The Cambridge History of American Literature Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521301053 Brandt Nat 1990 The town that started the Civil War Syracuse University Press ISBN 978 0815602439 Buinicki Martin T 2006 Negotiating Copyright Authorship and the Discourse of Literary Property Rights in Nineteenth Century America Routledge ISBN 978 0415976251 Castronovo Russ 2014 Transatlantic vs Hemispheric Toni Morrison s Long Nineteenth Century by Amy Brickhouse The Oxford Handbook of Nineteenth Century American Literature Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199355891 Claybaugh Amanda 2003 Uncle Tom s Cabin Barnes and Noble Classics ISBN 978 1593081218 de Rosa Deborah C 2003 Domestic Abolitionism and Juvenile Literature 1830 1865 SUNY Press ISBN 978 0791458259 Eisenmann Linda 1998 Historical Dictionary of Women s Education in the United States Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0313293238 Frick John W 2016 Uncle Tom s Cabin on the American Stage and Screen Macmillan US ISBN 978 0230114074 Gates Henry Louis 1987 Figures in Black Words Signs and the Racial Self Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195035643 Griffiths Katie 2016 Harriet Beecher Stowe Author and Abolitionist Cavendish Square Publishing ISBN 978 1502619303 Hagedorn Ann 2002 Beyond The River The Untold Story of the Heroes of the Underground Railroad Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0684870656 Jackson Robert 2017 Fade In Crossroads A History of the Southern Cinema Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0190660185 Jaynes Gerald D 2005 Encyclopedia of African American Society Vol 1 Sage Publications ISBN 978 0761927648 Jordan Lake Joy 2005 Whitewashing Uncle Tom s Cabin Nineteenth Century Women Novelists Respond to Stowe Vanderbilt University Press ISBN 978 0826514769 Kabatchnik Ammon 2017 Blood on the Stage 1800 to 1900 Milestone Plays of Murder Mystery and Mayhem Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers ISBN 978 1538106174 Kaufman Will 2006 The Civil War in American Culture Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0748619351 Keith LeeAnna 2009 The Colfax Massacre The Untold Story of Black Power White Terror and the Death of Reconstruction Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195310269 Kurian George Thomas 2010 The Encyclopedia of Christian Literature Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0810869875 Larsen David L 2000 The Company of the Creative A Christian Reader s Guide to Great Literature and Its Themes Kregel Publications ISBN 978 0825430978 Lott Eric 2013 Love and Theft Blackface Minstrelsy and the American Working Class 20th ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195320558 Louis Fidel DeSimone Erika eds 2014 Voices Beyond Bondage An Anthology of Verse by African Americans of the 19th Century NewSouth Books ISBN 978 1588382986 Lowance Mason I Jr Westbrook Ellen E De Prospo R 1994 The Stowe Debate Rhetorical Strategies in Uncle Tom s Cabin University of Massachusetts Press ISBN 978 0870239519 McPherson James Munro 1997 Drawn With the Sword Reflections on the American Civil War Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195096798 Noble Marianne 2003 The Ecstasies of Sentimental Wounding in Uncle Tom s Cabin In Rosenthal Debra J ed A Routledge Literary Sourcebook on Harriet Beecher Stowe s Uncle Tom s Cabin Routledge ISBN 978 0415234733 Nudelman Franny 2004 John Brown s Body Slavery Violence and the Culture of War University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0807828830 Orwell George 1968 Good Bad Books The Collected Essays Journalism and Letters of George Orwell Vol 4 Harcourt Brace and World ISBN 978 0151185498 Powell Timothy B 2021 Ruthless Democracy A Multicultural Interpretation of the American Renaissance Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691007298 Rosenthal Debra J ed 2003 A Routledge Literary Sourcebook on Harriet Beecher Stowe s Uncle Tom s Cabin Routledge ISBN 978 0415234733 Rubinstein Annette T 2011 American Literature Root and Flower Vol 1 Monthly Review Press ISBN 978 1583671924 Smith Bonnie G ed 2008 The Oxford Encyclopedia of Women in World History Vol 1 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195148909 Smith Gail K 2001 The Sentimental Novel The Example of Harriet Beecher Stowe In Bauer Dale M Gould Philip eds The Cambridge Companion to Nineteenth Century American Women s Writing Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521669757 Smith Jessie Carney 1988 Images of Blacks in American Culture A Reference Guide to Information Sources Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0313248443 Snodgrass Mary Ellen 2015 The Underground Railroad An Encyclopedia of People Places and Operations Taylor amp Francis ISBN 9780765680938 Sorett Josef 2016 Spirit in the Dark A Religious History of Racial Aesthetics Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199844937 Stowe Charles Edward 1911 Harriet Beecher Stowe The Story of Her Life Houghton Mifflin Co Stowe Harriet Beecher 1854 A Key to Uncle Tom s Cabin John P Jewett Tompkins Jane 1985 Sentimental Power Uncle Tom s Cabin and the Politics of Literary History Sensational Designs The Cultural Work of American Fiction 1790 1860 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195035650 Vrettos Athena 1995 Somatic Fictions Imagining Illness in Victorian Culture Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0804724241 Weinstein Cindy 2004 The Cambridge Companion to Harriet Beecher Stowe Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521825924 Wilson Edmund 1962 Patriotic Gore Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 978 1466899636 OCLC 1128081969 Williams Linda 2001 Playing the Race Card Melodramas of Black and White from Uncle Tom to O J Simpson Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691058009 Journals Arnett A M March 1920 Review of James Baird Weaver by Fred Emory Haynes Political Science Quarterly 35 1 154 157 doi 10 2307 2141508 JSTOR 2141508 Profile of James Baird Weaver from archive org 2007 Retrieved February 17 2007 Ashland Alexander J Fall 2020 Documenting Novel Sources in Antebellum U S Literature South Atlantic Review 85 3 Bellin Joshua D 1993 Up to Heaven s Gate Down in Earth s Dust the Politics of Judgment in Uncle Tom s Cabin American Literature 65 2 275 295 doi 10 2307 2927342 JSTOR 2927342 Beidler Philip D Winter 2005 Caroline Lee Hentz s Long Journey PDF Alabama Heritage 75 24 31 Benbow Mark E October 2010 Birth of a Quotation Woodrow Wilson and Like Writing History with Lightning Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 9 4 510 doi 10 1017 S1537781400004242 JSTOR 20799409 S2CID 162913069 Dixon might be best described as a professional racist who made his living writing books and plays attacking the presence of African Americans in the United States A firm believer not only in white supremacy but also in the degeneration of blacks after slavery ended Dixon thought the ideal solution to America s racial problems was to deport all blacks to Africa Berman Carolyn Vellenga Summer 2000 Creole Family Politics in Uncle Tom s Cabin and Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl Novel A Forum on Fiction 33 3 328 353 doi 10 2307 1346168 JSTOR 1346168 Brophy Alfred L 1995 1996 Over and above There Broods a Portentous Shadow The Shadow of Law Harriet Beecher Stowe s Critique of Slave Law in Uncle Tom s Cabin PDF Journal of Law and Religion 12 2 457 506 doi 10 2307 1051590 JSTOR 1051590 S2CID 159994075 Cordell Ryan C Spring 2008 Enslaving you body and soul the uses of temperance in Uncle Tom s Cabin and anti Tom fiction Studies in American Fiction 36 1 3 26 doi 10 1353 saf 2008 0005 S2CID 153482599 Cuenca Carme Manuel Winter 1997 1998 An angel in the plantation The economics of slavery and the politics of literary domesticity in Caroline Lee Hentz s The Planter s Northern Bride The Mississippi Quarterly 51 1 87 104 JSTOR 26476914 DeLombard Jeannine Fall 2012 Mightier than the Sword Uncle Tom s Cabin and the Battle for America The Historian 74 3 DiMaggio Kenneth 2014 Uncle Tom s Cabin Global Best Seller Anti slave Narrative Imperialist Agenda Global Studies Journal 7 1 15 23 doi 10 18848 1835 4432 CGP 46892 Dinerstein Joel Spring 2009 Uncle Tom Is Dead Wright Himes and Ellison Lay a Mask to Rest African American Review 43 1 83 98 doi 10 1353 afa 0 0021 JSTOR 27802564 S2CID 161792306 Gatta John Summer 2015 Harriet s Houses The Sewanee Review 123 3 493 502 doi 10 1353 sew 2015 0080 JSTOR 43663097 S2CID 161424691 Glowacki Peggy April 2015 Visualizing Uncle Tom s Cabin Images and Interpretation PDF Illinois Library Association Reporter 33 2 Goldner Ellen J Spring 2001 Arguing with Pictures Race Class and the Formation of Popular Abolitionism Through Uncle Tom s Cabin Journal of American amp Comparative Cultures 24 1 2 71 84 doi 10 1111 j 1537 4726 2001 2401 71 x a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint date and year link Gossett Thomas F March 1978 Review of The Building of Uncle Tom s Cabin by E Bruce Kirkham American Literature 50 1 123 124 doi 10 2307 2925530 JSTOR 2925530 Grant David 1998 Uncle Tom s Cabin and the Triumph of Republican Rhetoric New England Quarterly 71 3 429 448 doi 10 2307 366852 JSTOR 366852 Halpern Faye 2011 Unmasking Criticism The Problem with Being a Good Reader of Sentimental Rhetoric Narrative 19 1 51 71 doi 10 1353 nar 2011 0005 JSTOR 41289286 S2CID 145794072 Hamilton Kendra June 6 2002 The Strange Career of Uncle Tom PDF Black Issues in Higher Education 19 8 22 27 Holohan Marianne January 2011 British Illustrated Editions of Uncle Tom s Cabin Race Working Class Literacy and Transatlantic Reprinting in the 1850s Resources for American Literary Study 36 1 27 65 doi 10 5325 resoamerlitestud 36 2011 0027 S2CID 246646334 Hulser Kathleen 2003 Reading Uncle Tom s Image From Anti slavery Hero to Racial Insult New York Journal of American History 65 1 75 79 ISSN 1551 5486 Hovet Theodore R 1979 Mrs Thomas C Upham s Happy Phebe A Feminine Source of Uncle Tom American Literature 51 2 267 270 doi 10 2307 2925588 JSTOR 2925588 Jamieson Erin December 2018 Systemic Racism as a Living Text Implications of Uncle Tom s Cabin as a Fictionalized Narrative of Present and Past Black Bodies Journal of African American Studies 22 4 329 344 doi 10 1007 s12111 018 9414 8 S2CID 150014032 Jie Tao October 1993 Uncle Tom s Cabin The First American Novel Translated into Chinese Prospects 18 517 534 doi 10 1017 S0361233300005007 Jones Douglas A October 2019 Adena Spingarn Uncle Tom From Martyr to Traitor American Historical Review 124 4 1465 1467 doi 10 1093 ahr rhz962 Nichols Charles 1958 The Origins of Uncle Tom s Cabin The Phylon Quarterly 19 3 328 334 doi 10 2307 273254 JSTOR 273254 Oertel Kristen May 2020 Sharp Flashes of Lightning Come from Black Clouds The Life of Josiah Henson Journal of Southern History 86 2 465 466 doi 10 1353 soh 2020 0107 S2CID 219491541 Painter Nell Irvin 2000 Honest Abe and Uncle Tom Canadian Review of American Studies 30 3 245 272 doi 10 3138 CRAS s030 03 01 S2CID 155725588 Reese R Anthony Winter 2007 Innocent Infringement in U S Copyright Law A History PDF Columbia Journal of Law amp the Arts 30 2 133 184 Ridgely Joseph V January 1960 Woodcraft Simms s First Answer to Uncle Tom s Cabin American Literature 31 4 421 433 doi 10 2307 2922435 JSTOR 2922435 Riss Arthur 1994 Racial Essentialism and Family Values in Uncle Tom s Cabin American Quarterly 46 4 513 544 doi 10 2307 2713382 JSTOR 2713382 Shelby Tommie Spring 2012 The Ethics of Uncle Tom s Children PDF Critical Inquiry 38 3 513 532 doi 10 1086 664549 S2CID 153830399 Smylie James H 1995 Uncle Tom s Cabin Revisited the Bible the Romantic Imagination and the Sympathies of Christ American Presbyterians 73 3 165 175 doi 10 1177 002096437302700105 S2CID 170344119 Stone Harry 1957 Charles Dickens and Harriet Beecher Stowe Nineteenth Century Fiction 12 3 188 202 doi 10 2307 3044086 JSTOR 3044086 Szczesiul Anthony E March 1996 The Canonization of Tom and Eva Catholic Hagiography and Uncle Tom s Cabin American Transcendental Quarterly 10 1 59 73 Vollaro Daniel R Winter 2009 Lincoln Stowe and the Little Woman Great War Story The Making and Breaking of a Great American Anecdote Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association 30 1 18 34 Archived from the original on October 15 2009 Watson Charles S November 1976 Simms s Review of Uncle Tom s Cabin American Literature 48 3 365 368 doi 10 2307 2924870 JSTOR 2924870 Winship Michael October 1999 The Greatest Book of Its Kind A Publishing History of Uncle Tom s Cabin PDF Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society 109 2 309 332 Winship Michael 2010 The Library of Congress in 1892 Ainsworth Spofford Houghton Mifflin and Company and Uncle Tom s Cabin Libraries amp the Cultural Record 45 1 85 91 doi 10 1353 lac 0 0114 JSTOR 20720641 S2CID 153517304 Wolff Cynthia Griffin 1995 Masculinity in Uncle Tom s Cabin American Quarterly 47 4 595 618 doi 10 2307 2713368 JSTOR 2713368 Wright Robert E Winter 2021 Liberty Befits All Stowe and Uncle Tom s Cabin Independent Review 25 3 385 396 Further readingAiken George L 1993 Uncle Tom s Cabin Garland Gerould Daniel C ed 1983 American Melodrama Performing Arts Journal Publications Parfait Claire 2007 The Publishing History of Uncle s Tom s Cabin 1852 2002 Aldershot Ashgate Reynolds David S 2011 Mightier Than the Sword Uncle Tom s Cabinand the Battle for America W W Norton amp Company Stowe Harriet Beecher Gates Henry Louis Robbins Hollis 2007 The Annotated Uncle Tom s Cabin W W Norton amp Company External links nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Uncle Tom s Cabin nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Uncle Tom s Cabin External videos nbsp Presentation by Reynolds on Mightier Than the Sword Uncle Tom s Cabin and the Battle for America at the Harriet Beecher Stowe Center May 19 2011 C SPAN Uncle Tom s Cabin at Standard Ebooks University of Virginia Web site Uncle Tom s Cabin and American Culture A Multi Media Archive edited by Stephen Railton covers 1830 to 1930 offering links to primary and bibliographic sources on the cultural background various editions and public reception of Harriet Beecher Stowe s influential novel The site also provides the full text of the book audio and video clips and examples of related merchandising Uncle Tom s Cabin at Project Gutenberg Uncle Tom s Cabin available at Internet Archive Scanned illustrated original editions nbsp Uncle Tom s Cabin public domain audiobook at LibriVox Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Uncle Tom 27s Cabin amp oldid 1214697138 Eva, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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