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Uncle Tom

Uncle Tom is the title character of Harriet Beecher Stowe's 1852 novel Uncle Tom's Cabin.[1] The character was seen by many readers as a ground-breaking humanistic portrayal of a slave, one who uses nonresistance and gives his life to protect others who have escaped from slavery. However, the character also came to be seen as inexplicably kind to white slaveholders, especially based on his portrayal in pro-compassion dramatizations. This led to the use of Uncle Tom – sometimes shortened to just a Tom[2][3] – as a derogatory epithet for an exceedingly subservient person or house negro, particularly one aware of his or her own lower-class racial status.

Uncle Tom
Uncle Tom's Cabin character
Detail of an illustration from the first book edition of Uncle Tom's Cabin, depicting Uncle Tom as a young African-American man
Created byHarriet Beecher Stowe
In-universe information
GenderMale
ReligionChristian
NationalityAmerican

Original characterization and critical evaluations edit

At the time of the novel's initial publication in 1851, Uncle Tom was a rejection of the existing stereotypes of minstrel shows; Stowe's melodramatic story humanized the suffering of slavery for white audiences by portraying Tom as a young, strong Jesus-like figure who is ultimately martyred, beaten to death by a cruel master (Simon Legree) because he refuses to betray the whereabouts of two women who had escaped from slavery.[4][5] Stowe reversed the gender conventions of slave narratives by juxtaposing Uncle Tom's passivity against the daring of three African American women who escape from slavery.[4]

The novel was both influential and commercially successful, published as a serial from 1851 to 1852 and as a book from 1852 onward.[4][5] An estimated 500,000 copies had sold worldwide by 1853, including unauthorized reprints.[6] Senator Charles Sumner credited Uncle Tom's Cabin for the election of Abraham Lincoln, an opinion that is later echoed in the apocryphal story of Lincoln greeting Stowe with the quip, "So you're the little woman who wrote the book that made this great war!"[4][7] Frederick Douglass praised the novel as "a flash to light a million camp fires in front of the embattled hosts of slavery."[4] Despite Douglass's enthusiasm, an anonymous 1852 reviewer for William Lloyd Garrison's publication, The Liberator, suspected a racial double standard in the idealization of Uncle Tom:

Uncle Tom's character is sketched with great power and rare religious perception. It triumphantly exemplifies the nature, tendency, and results of Christian non-resistance. We are curious to know whether Mrs. Stowe is a believer in the duty of non-resistance for the white man, under all possible outrage and peril, as for the black man ... [For whites in parallel circumstances, it is often said] Talk not of overcoming evil with good – it is madness! Talk not of peacefully submitting to chains and stripes – it is base servility! Talk not of servants being obedient to their masters – let the blood of tyrants flow! How is this to be explained or reconciled? Is there one law of submission and non-resistance for the black man, and another of rebellion and conflict for the white man? When it is the whites who are trodden in the dust, does Christ justify them in taking up arms to vindicate their rights? And when it is the blacks who are thus treated, does Christ require them to be patient, harmless, long-suffering, and forgiving? Are there two Christs?[8]

James Weldon Johnson, a prominent figure of the Harlem Renaissance, expressed an antipathetic opinion in his autobiography:

For my part, I was never an admirer of Uncle Tom, nor of his type of goodness; but I believe that there were lots of old Negroes as foolishly good as he.

In 1949, American writer James Baldwin rejected the emasculation of the title character "robbed of his humanity and divested of his sex" as the price of spiritual salvation for a dark-skinned man in a fiction whose African-American characters, in Baldwin's view, were invariably two-dimensional stereotypes.[4][9] To Baldwin, Stowe was closer to a pamphleteer than a novelist and her artistic vision was fatally marred by polemics and racism that manifested especially in her handling of the title character.[9] Stowe had stated that her sons had wept when she first read them the scene of Uncle Tom's death. But after Baldwin's essay, it ceased being respectable to accept the melodrama of the Uncle Tom story.[4] Uncle Tom became what critic Linda Williams describes as "an epithet of servility" and the novel's reputation plummeted until feminist critics led by Jane Tompkins reassessed the tale's female characters.[4]

According to Debra J. Rosenthal, in an introduction to a collection of critical appraisals for the Routledge Literary Sourcebook on Harriet Beecher Stowe's "Uncle Tom's Cabin", overall reactions have been mixed, with some critics praising the novel for affirming the humanity of the African American characters and for the risks Stowe assumed in taking a very public stand against slavery before abolitionism had become a socially acceptable cause, and others criticizing the very limited terms upon which those characters's humanity was affirmed and the artistic shortcomings of political melodrama.[10]

Inspiration edit

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

A specific impetus for the novel was the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850, which imposed heavy fines upon law enforcement personnel in Northern states if they refused to assist the return of people who escaped from slavery.[5][11] The new law also stripped African Americans of the right to request a jury trial or to testify on their own behalf, even if they were legally free, whenever a single claimant presented an affidavit of ownership.[11] The same law authorized a $1000 (~$27,442 in 2022) fine and six months imprisonment for anyone who knowingly harbored or assisted a fugitive slave.[11] These terms infuriated Stowe, so the novel was written, read, and debated as a political abolitionist tract.[5]

Stowe drew inspiration for the Uncle Tom character from several sources. The best-known of these was Josiah Henson, an ex-slave whose autobiography, The Life of Josiah Henson, Formerly a Slave, Now an Inhabitant of Canada, as Narrated by Himself, was originally published in 1849 and later republished in two extensively revised editions after the publication of Uncle Tom's Cabin.[12] Henson was enslaved at birth in 1789.[12] He became a Christian at age eighteen and began preaching.[12] Henson attempted to purchase his freedom for $450, but after selling his personal assets to raise $350 and signing a promissory note for the remainder, Henson's owner raised the price to $1000; Henson was unable to prove that the original agreement had been for a lesser amount.[12] Shortly afterward Henson was ordered on a trip south to New Orleans. When he learned that he was to be sold there, he obtained a weapon. He contemplated murdering his white companions with the weapon, but decided against violence because his Christian morals forbade it.[12] A sudden illness in one of his companions forced their return to Kentucky, and shortly afterward Henson escaped north with his family, settling in Canada where he became a civic leader.[12]

Stowe read the first edition of Henson's narrative and later confirmed that she had incorporated elements from it into Uncle Tom's Cabin.[12] Kentucky and New Orleans figure in both Henson's narrative and the novel's settings, and some other story elements are similar.[12]

In the public imagination, however, Henson became synonymous with Uncle Tom.[12] After Stowe's death her son and grandson claimed she and Henson had met before Uncle Tom's Cabin was written, but the chronology does not hold up to scrutiny and she probably drew material only from his published autobiography.[12]

Epithet edit

The term "Uncle Tom" is used as an epithet for an excessively subservient person, particularly when that person perceives his or her own lower-class status based on race. It is similarly used to negatively describe people who betray their own group by participating in its oppression, whether willingly or not.[1][13] The term has also, with more intended neutrality, been applied in psychology in the form of "Uncle Tom syndrome", a term for the use of subservience, appeasement, and passivity to cope with intimidation and threats.

The popular negative connotations of "Uncle Tom" have largely been attributed to the numerous derivative works inspired by Uncle Tom's Cabin in the decade after its release, rather than to the original novel itself, whose title character is a more positive figure.[4] These works, often called a "Tom show," lampooned and distorted the portrayal of Uncle Tom with politically loaded overtones.[6]

History edit

 
Uncle Tom, from an 1885 magic lantern series.

American copyright law before 1856 did not give novel authors any control over derivative stage adaptations, so Stowe neither approved the adaptations nor profited from them.[14] Minstrel show retellings in particular, usually performed by white men in blackface, tended to be derisive and pro-slavery, transforming Uncle Tom from a Christian martyr to a fool or apologist for slavery.[6]

Adapted theatrical performances of the novel, called Tom Shows, remained in continual production in the United States for at least 80 years beyond the 1850s (1930s).[14] These representations had a lasting cultural impact and influenced the pejorative nature of the term Uncle Tom in later popular use.[6]

Although not every minstrel depiction of Uncle Tom was negative, the dominant version developed into a character very different from Stowe's hero.[6][15] Whereas Stowe's Uncle Tom was a young, muscular, and virile man who refused to obey his cruel master, Simon Legree, when Legree ordered him to beat other slaves, the stock character of the minstrel shows was degenerated into a shuffling, asexual individual, with a receding hairline and graying hair.[15] For Jo-Ann Morgan, author of Uncle Tom's Cabin as Visual Culture, these shifting representations undermined the subversive layers of Stowe's original characterization by redefining Uncle Tom until he fitted within prevailing racist norms.[14] Particularly after the Civil War, as the political thrust of the novel which had arguably helped to precipitate that war became obsolete to actual political discourse, popular depictions of the title character recast him within the apologetics of the Lost Cause of the Confederacy.[14] The virile father of the abolitionist serial and first book edition degenerated into a decrepit old man, and with that transformation the character lost the capacity for resistance that had originally given meaning to his choices.[14][15] Stowe never meant Uncle Tom to be a derided name, but the term, as a pejorative, has developed based on how later versions of the character, stripped of his inherent strength, were depicted on stage.[16]

Claire Parfait, author of The Publishing History of Uncle Tom's Cabin, 1852–2002, opined that "the many alterations in retellings of the Uncle Tom story demonstrate an impulse to correct the retellers's perceptions of its flaws" and of "the capacity of the novel to irritate and rankle, even a century and a half after its first publication."[5]

20th-century Black cultural critique edit

Spike Lee's 2000 film Bamboozled, which was a dark modern satire or dram-edy that challenges this kind of negative stereotyping. The film featured popular Black actors such as Damon Wayans as Pierre "Peerless Dothan" Delacroix and Jada Pinkett Smith as Sloan Hopkins, comedians such as Tommy Davidson as Womack "Sleep 'n Eat" and Paul Mooney as Junebug, and hip hop artists such as Yasiin Bey formerly known as Mos Def as Julius "Big Blak Afrika" Hopkins and The Roots as the Alabama Porchmonkeys. Lee's use of popular celebrities as satirical stock characters challenged long-held stereotypes of Black people in mainstream popular culture from novels to the screen. Casting hip-hop artists also allowed the filmmaker to allude to the role of negative stereotyping gangsta rap in the early aughts: "Spike Lee says in the DVD commentary [about Bamboozled] that gangsta rap is a kind of stereotype that doesn't advance the interests of blacks. He reiterated this position at his talk at Northeastern."[17]

Bamboozled challenges notions of "Uncle toming" or "acting white" as well as demonstrating the concept of double-consciousness coined by the notable sociologist W. E. B. Du Bois in his book The Souls of Black Folk (1903).[18]

Also see the Emmy Award-winning 1987 documentary film Ethnic Notions by Black gay filmmaker Marlon Riggs narrated by actor Esther Rolle. The documentary narrates the history and legacy of the dehumanizing effects of African-American stereotypes and racializing caricatures[19] from the "Loyal Uncle Tom" to grinning fools (see Stepin Fetchit) in cartoons, minstrel shows, advertisements, household artifacts, and even children's rhymes.[20]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Uncle Tom". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary.
  2. ^ Capehart, Jonathan. "Stop calling Clarence Thomas an 'Uncle Tom'". Washington Post. Retrieved 2020-08-25.
  3. ^ Press, Stanford University. "Start reading Uncle Tom | Adena Spingarn, Foreword by Henry Louis Gates, Jr". www.sup.org. Retrieved 2020-08-25.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Williams, Linda (2002). Playing the Race Card: Melodramas of Black and White from Uncle Tom to O.J. Simpson. Princeton University Press. pp. 7, 30–31, 47–62. ISBN 978-0-691-10283-2. Retrieved 2009-04-16.
  5. ^ a b c d e Parfait, Claire (2007). The publishing history of Uncle Tom's cabin, 1852–2002. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. pp. 1–2, 6. ISBN 978-0-7546-5514-5. Retrieved 2009-04-16.
  6. ^ a b c d e Meer, Sarah (2005). Uncle Tom mania: slavery, minstrelsy, and transatlantic culture in the 1850s. University of Georgia Press. pp. 1–4, 9, 14–15. ISBN 978-0-8203-2737-2. Retrieved 2009-04-16.
  7. ^ R., Vollaro, Daniel (2009-01-01). "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). ISSN 1945-7987.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ Untitled review, republished in A Routledge literary sourcebook on Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's cabin by Debra J. Rosenthal. Routledge. 2004 [1852]. p. 35. ISBN 978-0-415-23473-3. Retrieved 2009-04-17.
  9. ^ a b Baldwin, James (2006) [1949]. Everybody's Protest Novel (partial republication). Harvard University Press. pp. 118–121. ISBN 978-0-674-02352-9. Retrieved 2009-04-17.
  10. ^ Rosenthal, Debra J. (2004). A Routledge literary sourcebook on Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's cabin. Routledge. pp. 30–31. ISBN 978-0-415-23473-3. Retrieved 2009-04-17.
  11. ^ a b c "The Fugitive Slave Act". U.S. Constitution Online. Retrieved 2008-10-03.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Winks, Robin W. (2003). Autobiography of Josiah Henson: An Inspiration for Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom (introduction). Courier Dover Publications. pp. v–vi, x–xi, xviii–xix. ISBN 978-0-486-42863-5. Retrieved 2009-04-16.
  13. ^ "Uncle Tom". Wordnet.princeton.edu. Retrieved April 24, 2009.
  14. ^ a b c d e Morgan, Jo-Ann (2007). Uncle Tom's cabin as visual culture. University of Missouri Press. pp. 1–5, 11–12, 17–19. ISBN 978-0-8262-1715-8. Retrieved 2009-04-17. James Baldwin Uncle Tom.
  15. ^ a b c Richardson, Riché (2007). Black masculinity and the U.S. South: from Uncle Tom to gangsta. University of Georgia Press. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-8203-2890-4. Retrieved 2009-04-16.
  16. ^ Keyes, Allison (2002-11-29). "NPR: A New Look at 'Uncle Tom's Cabin'". The Tavis Smiley Show. NPR. Retrieved 2008-01-09.
  17. ^ Slaner, Stephen E.; Clyne, Sandra (2008). "The use of Spike Lee's Bamboozled to promote difficult dialogues on race". Human Architecture: Journal of the Sociology of Self-Knowledge. 6 (1): 13 – via Google Scholar.
  18. ^ Bolt, Julie (2006). "Bamboozled". Radical Teacher. 75: 42 – via ProQuest.
  19. ^ Grant, Nancy (1987). "Review of Ethnic Notions". The Journal of American History. 74 (3): 1107–1109. doi:10.2307/1902247. ISSN 0021-8723. JSTOR 1902247.
  20. ^ Riggs, Marlon, and Esther Rolle. "Ethnic notions", Cornell University Library. eCommons: Open scholarship at Cornell (2012)

Further reading edit

  • Osofsky, Gilbert, ed. (1969). Puttin' On Ole Massa: The Slave Narratives of Henry Bibb, William Wells Brown, and Solomon Northup. Harper & Row. ISBN 978-0-06-131432-2.
  • Mohammad Ali (2009). Thrilla in Manilla (Documentary). US: HBO.

External links edit

  • An article on the Uncle Tom caricature
  • An article from EveryGirls 1931 by Olive Burns Kirby

uncle, other, uses, disambiguation, title, character, harriet, beecher, stowe, 1852, novel, cabin, character, seen, many, readers, ground, breaking, humanistic, portrayal, slave, uses, nonresistance, gives, life, protect, others, have, escaped, from, slavery, . For other uses see Uncle Tom disambiguation Uncle Tom is the title character of Harriet Beecher Stowe s 1852 novel Uncle Tom s Cabin 1 The character was seen by many readers as a ground breaking humanistic portrayal of a slave one who uses nonresistance and gives his life to protect others who have escaped from slavery However the character also came to be seen as inexplicably kind to white slaveholders especially based on his portrayal in pro compassion dramatizations This led to the use of Uncle Tom sometimes shortened to just a Tom 2 3 as a derogatory epithet for an exceedingly subservient person or house negro particularly one aware of his or her own lower class racial status Uncle TomUncle Tom s Cabin characterDetail of an illustration from the first book edition of Uncle Tom s Cabin depicting Uncle Tom as a young African American manCreated byHarriet Beecher StoweIn universe informationGenderMaleReligionChristianNationalityAmerican Contents 1 Original characterization and critical evaluations 2 Inspiration 3 Epithet 3 1 History 3 2 20th century Black cultural critique 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksOriginal characterization and critical evaluations editAt the time of the novel s initial publication in 1851 Uncle Tom was a rejection of the existing stereotypes of minstrel shows Stowe s melodramatic story humanized the suffering of slavery for white audiences by portraying Tom as a young strong Jesus like figure who is ultimately martyred beaten to death by a cruel master Simon Legree because he refuses to betray the whereabouts of two women who had escaped from slavery 4 5 Stowe reversed the gender conventions of slave narratives by juxtaposing Uncle Tom s passivity against the daring of three African American women who escape from slavery 4 The novel was both influential and commercially successful published as a serial from 1851 to 1852 and as a book from 1852 onward 4 5 An estimated 500 000 copies had sold worldwide by 1853 including unauthorized reprints 6 Senator Charles Sumner credited Uncle Tom s Cabin for the election of Abraham Lincoln an opinion that is later echoed in the apocryphal story of Lincoln greeting Stowe with the quip So you re the little woman who wrote the book that made this great war 4 7 Frederick Douglass praised the novel as a flash to light a million camp fires in front of the embattled hosts of slavery 4 Despite Douglass s enthusiasm an anonymous 1852 reviewer for William Lloyd Garrison s publication The Liberator suspected a racial double standard in the idealization of Uncle Tom Uncle Tom s character is sketched with great power and rare religious perception It triumphantly exemplifies the nature tendency and results of Christian non resistance We are curious to know whether Mrs Stowe is a believer in the duty of non resistance for the white man under all possible outrage and peril as for the black man For whites in parallel circumstances it is often said Talk not of overcoming evil with good it is madness Talk not of peacefully submitting to chains and stripes it is base servility Talk not of servants being obedient to their masters let the blood of tyrants flow How is this to be explained or reconciled Is there one law of submission and non resistance for the black man and another of rebellion and conflict for the white man When it is the whites who are trodden in the dust does Christ justify them in taking up arms to vindicate their rights And when it is the blacks who are thus treated does Christ require them to be patient harmless long suffering and forgiving Are there two Christs 8 James Weldon Johnson a prominent figure of the Harlem Renaissance expressed an antipathetic opinion in his autobiography For my part I was never an admirer of Uncle Tom nor of his type of goodness but I believe that there were lots of old Negroes as foolishly good as he In 1949 American writer James Baldwin rejected the emasculation of the title character robbed of his humanity and divested of his sex as the price of spiritual salvation for a dark skinned man in a fiction whose African American characters in Baldwin s view were invariably two dimensional stereotypes 4 9 To Baldwin Stowe was closer to a pamphleteer than a novelist and her artistic vision was fatally marred by polemics and racism that manifested especially in her handling of the title character 9 Stowe had stated that her sons had wept when she first read them the scene of Uncle Tom s death But after Baldwin s essay it ceased being respectable to accept the melodrama of the Uncle Tom story 4 Uncle Tom became what critic Linda Williams describes as an epithet of servility and the novel s reputation plummeted until feminist critics led by Jane Tompkins reassessed the tale s female characters 4 According to Debra J Rosenthal in an introduction to a collection of critical appraisals for the Routledge Literary Sourcebook on Harriet Beecher Stowe s Uncle Tom s Cabin overall reactions have been mixed with some critics praising the novel for affirming the humanity of the African American characters and for the risks Stowe assumed in taking a very public stand against slavery before abolitionism had become a socially acceptable cause and others criticizing the very limited terms upon which those characters s humanity was affirmed and the artistic shortcomings of political melodrama 10 Inspiration edit nbsp Uncle Tom and Eva Staffordshire figure England 1855 1860 glazed and painted earthenwareA specific impetus for the novel was the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 which imposed heavy fines upon law enforcement personnel in Northern states if they refused to assist the return of people who escaped from slavery 5 11 The new law also stripped African Americans of the right to request a jury trial or to testify on their own behalf even if they were legally free whenever a single claimant presented an affidavit of ownership 11 The same law authorized a 1000 27 442 in 2022 fine and six months imprisonment for anyone who knowingly harbored or assisted a fugitive slave 11 These terms infuriated Stowe so the novel was written read and debated as a political abolitionist tract 5 Stowe drew inspiration for the Uncle Tom character from several sources The best known of these was Josiah Henson an ex slave whose autobiography The Life of Josiah Henson Formerly a Slave Now an Inhabitant of Canada as Narrated by Himself was originally published in 1849 and later republished in two extensively revised editions after the publication of Uncle Tom s Cabin 12 Henson was enslaved at birth in 1789 12 He became a Christian at age eighteen and began preaching 12 Henson attempted to purchase his freedom for 450 but after selling his personal assets to raise 350 and signing a promissory note for the remainder Henson s owner raised the price to 1000 Henson was unable to prove that the original agreement had been for a lesser amount 12 Shortly afterward Henson was ordered on a trip south to New Orleans When he learned that he was to be sold there he obtained a weapon He contemplated murdering his white companions with the weapon but decided against violence because his Christian morals forbade it 12 A sudden illness in one of his companions forced their return to Kentucky and shortly afterward Henson escaped north with his family settling in Canada where he became a civic leader 12 Stowe read the first edition of Henson s narrative and later confirmed that she had incorporated elements from it into Uncle Tom s Cabin 12 Kentucky and New Orleans figure in both Henson s narrative and the novel s settings and some other story elements are similar 12 In the public imagination however Henson became synonymous with Uncle Tom 12 After Stowe s death her son and grandson claimed she and Henson had met before Uncle Tom s Cabin was written but the chronology does not hold up to scrutiny and she probably drew material only from his published autobiography 12 Epithet editThe term Uncle Tom is used as an epithet for an excessively subservient person particularly when that person perceives his or her own lower class status based on race It is similarly used to negatively describe people who betray their own group by participating in its oppression whether willingly or not 1 13 The term has also with more intended neutrality been applied in psychology in the form of Uncle Tom syndrome a term for the use of subservience appeasement and passivity to cope with intimidation and threats The popular negative connotations of Uncle Tom have largely been attributed to the numerous derivative works inspired by Uncle Tom s Cabin in the decade after its release rather than to the original novel itself whose title character is a more positive figure 4 These works often called a Tom show lampooned and distorted the portrayal of Uncle Tom with politically loaded overtones 6 History edit nbsp Uncle Tom from an 1885 magic lantern series American copyright law before 1856 did not give novel authors any control over derivative stage adaptations so Stowe neither approved the adaptations nor profited from them 14 Minstrel show retellings in particular usually performed by white men in blackface tended to be derisive and pro slavery transforming Uncle Tom from a Christian martyr to a fool or apologist for slavery 6 Adapted theatrical performances of the novel called Tom Shows remained in continual production in the United States for at least 80 years beyond the 1850s 1930s 14 These representations had a lasting cultural impact and influenced the pejorative nature of the term Uncle Tom in later popular use 6 Although not every minstrel depiction of Uncle Tom was negative the dominant version developed into a character very different from Stowe s hero 6 15 Whereas Stowe s Uncle Tom was a young muscular and virile man who refused to obey his cruel master Simon Legree when Legree ordered him to beat other slaves the stock character of the minstrel shows was degenerated into a shuffling asexual individual with a receding hairline and graying hair 15 For Jo Ann Morgan author of Uncle Tom s Cabin as Visual Culture these shifting representations undermined the subversive layers of Stowe s original characterization by redefining Uncle Tom until he fitted within prevailing racist norms 14 Particularly after the Civil War as the political thrust of the novel which had arguably helped to precipitate that war became obsolete to actual political discourse popular depictions of the title character recast him within the apologetics of the Lost Cause of the Confederacy 14 The virile father of the abolitionist serial and first book edition degenerated into a decrepit old man and with that transformation the character lost the capacity for resistance that had originally given meaning to his choices 14 15 Stowe never meant Uncle Tom to be a derided name but the term as a pejorative has developed based on how later versions of the character stripped of his inherent strength were depicted on stage 16 Claire Parfait author of The Publishing History of Uncle Tom s Cabin 1852 2002 opined that the many alterations in retellings of the Uncle Tom story demonstrate an impulse to correct the retellers s perceptions of its flaws and of the capacity of the novel to irritate and rankle even a century and a half after its first publication 5 20th century Black cultural critique edit Spike Lee s 2000 film Bamboozled which was a dark modern satire or dram edy that challenges this kind of negative stereotyping The film featured popular Black actors such as Damon Wayans as Pierre Peerless Dothan Delacroix and Jada Pinkett Smith as Sloan Hopkins comedians such as Tommy Davidson as Womack Sleep n Eat and Paul Mooney as Junebug and hip hop artists such as Yasiin Bey formerly known as Mos Def as Julius Big Blak Afrika Hopkins and The Roots as the Alabama Porchmonkeys Lee s use of popular celebrities as satirical stock characters challenged long held stereotypes of Black people in mainstream popular culture from novels to the screen Casting hip hop artists also allowed the filmmaker to allude to the role of negative stereotyping gangsta rap in the early aughts Spike Lee says in the DVD commentary about Bamboozled that gangsta rap is a kind of stereotype that doesn t advance the interests of blacks He reiterated this position at his talk at Northeastern 17 Bamboozled challenges notions of Uncle toming or acting white as well as demonstrating the concept of double consciousness coined by the notable sociologist W E B Du Bois in his book The Souls of Black Folk 1903 18 Also see the Emmy Award winning 1987 documentary film Ethnic Notions by Black gay filmmaker Marlon Riggs narrated by actor Esther Rolle The documentary narrates the history and legacy of the dehumanizing effects of African American stereotypes and racializing caricatures 19 from the Loyal Uncle Tom to grinning fools see Stepin Fetchit in cartoons minstrel shows advertisements household artifacts and even children s rhymes 20 See also editActing white Uncle Tom Syndrome The Brothers Brothers House Negro Colonial mentality Cultural cringe Culchie Dic Sion Dafydd Hanjian Jackeen Jump Jim Crow List of ethnic slurs Race traitor Respectability politics Shoneenism Stepin Fetchit Sycophant West BritReferences edit a b Uncle Tom Merriam Webster com Dictionary Capehart Jonathan Stop calling Clarence Thomas an Uncle Tom Washington Post Retrieved 2020 08 25 Press Stanford University Start reading Uncle Tom Adena Spingarn Foreword by Henry Louis Gates Jr www sup org Retrieved 2020 08 25 a b c d e f g h i Williams Linda 2002 Playing the Race Card Melodramas of Black and White from Uncle Tom to O J Simpson Princeton University Press pp 7 30 31 47 62 ISBN 978 0 691 10283 2 Retrieved 2009 04 16 a b c d e Parfait Claire 2007 The publishing history of Uncle Tom s cabin 1852 2002 Ashgate Publishing Ltd pp 1 2 6 ISBN 978 0 7546 5514 5 Retrieved 2009 04 16 a b c d e Meer Sarah 2005 Uncle Tom mania slavery minstrelsy and transatlantic culture in the 1850s University of Georgia Press pp 1 4 9 14 15 ISBN 978 0 8203 2737 2 Retrieved 2009 04 16 R Vollaro Daniel 2009 01 01 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 ISSN 1945 7987 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Untitled review republished in A Routledge literary sourcebook on Harriet Beecher Stowe s Uncle Tom s cabin by Debra J Rosenthal Routledge 2004 1852 p 35 ISBN 978 0 415 23473 3 Retrieved 2009 04 17 a b Baldwin James 2006 1949 Everybody s Protest Novel partial republication Harvard University Press pp 118 121 ISBN 978 0 674 02352 9 Retrieved 2009 04 17 Rosenthal Debra J 2004 A Routledge literary sourcebook on Harriet Beecher Stowe s Uncle Tom s cabin Routledge pp 30 31 ISBN 978 0 415 23473 3 Retrieved 2009 04 17 a b c The Fugitive Slave Act U S Constitution Online Retrieved 2008 10 03 a b c d e f g h i j Winks Robin W 2003 Autobiography of Josiah Henson An Inspiration for Harriet Beecher Stowe s Uncle Tom introduction Courier Dover Publications pp v vi x xi xviii xix ISBN 978 0 486 42863 5 Retrieved 2009 04 16 Uncle Tom Wordnet princeton edu Retrieved April 24 2009 a b c d e Morgan Jo Ann 2007 Uncle Tom s cabin as visual culture University of Missouri Press pp 1 5 11 12 17 19 ISBN 978 0 8262 1715 8 Retrieved 2009 04 17 James Baldwin Uncle Tom a b c Richardson Riche 2007 Black masculinity and the U S South from Uncle Tom to gangsta University of Georgia Press p 3 ISBN 978 0 8203 2890 4 Retrieved 2009 04 16 Keyes Allison 2002 11 29 NPR A New Look at Uncle Tom s Cabin The Tavis Smiley Show NPR Retrieved 2008 01 09 Slaner Stephen E Clyne Sandra 2008 The use of Spike Lee s Bamboozled to promote difficult dialogues on race Human Architecture Journal of the Sociology of Self Knowledge 6 1 13 via Google Scholar Bolt Julie 2006 Bamboozled Radical Teacher 75 42 via ProQuest Grant Nancy 1987 Review of Ethnic Notions The Journal of American History 74 3 1107 1109 doi 10 2307 1902247 ISSN 0021 8723 JSTOR 1902247 Riggs Marlon and Esther Rolle Ethnic notions Cornell University Library eCommons Open scholarship at Cornell 2012 Further reading editOsofsky Gilbert ed 1969 Puttin On Ole Massa The Slave Narratives of Henry Bibb William Wells Brown and Solomon Northup Harper amp Row ISBN 978 0 06 131432 2 Mohammad Ali 2009 Thrilla in Manilla Documentary US HBO External links edit nbsp Look up Uncle Tom in Wiktionary the free dictionary An article on the Uncle Tom caricature An article from EveryGirls 1931 by Olive Burns Kirby Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Uncle Tom amp oldid 1199407541, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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