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    From the very beginning of Uncle Tom’s Cabin it is very clear who the author’s intended audience is: white Christian mothers. Throughout the novel the author, Harriet Beecher Stowe, weaves in her definition of strong female characters and her ideals about the perfect woman in the 19th century and there for influences the thoughts of her audience. Stowe was so clearly trying to portray women in an empowering way, but her definition of equality was skewed and instead limited her female characters…

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    accuracy of Uncle Tom’s Cabin is that it showed both the cruel and brutal slave owners, and the ones that treated their slaves like people. The examples of this in the novel are Legree, being the cruel one, and Shelby being the kinder one. It also shows that, in the end, slaves were just their property. It shows this by Legree being abusive, and Shelby, although caring, sold his slaves for money instead of treating them as people. Even with a few inaccuracies, Uncle Tom’s Cabin provides a great…

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    attention” (Kendrick 71.) Critic Arthur Riss claims in his essay “Racial Essentialism and Family Values in Uncle Tom’s Cabin” that: “by the time Uncle Tom’s Cabin was published, essential racial differences was considered a self – evident fact” (Riss 520 – 21). In his famous essay published in 1949, “Everybody’s Protest Novel,” James Baldwin called Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin “a very bad novel, having, in its self – righteous virtuous sentimentality, much in common with Little…

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    Uncle Tom’s Cabin is a historical book written by Harriet Beecher Stowe. She describes her own experiences about slavery and ones that she has witnessed in the past through the text in her novel. Harriet grew up in Cincinnati where she had a very close look at how slavery was. Located on the Ohio River across from the slave state Kentucky, the city was filled with former slaves and their masters. Uncle Tom is a high-minded, hard working Christian black slave to a nice and kind family named the…

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    In Stowe 's book "Uncle Tom 's Cabin", Tom is a brave and honest man who is supposed to change people 's minds about slaves. Slavery occurred in many other places which Stowe emphasized and elucidated on. “The dark places on earth are full of the habitations of cruelty” (Stowe 340).…

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    Harriet Beecher Stowe’s novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin powerfully impacted American’s perception of slavery at the time of its release. In fact, Robert McNamara stated the novel “was indeed a factoring leading to the [Civil] War.” (McNamara) Perhaps this impact was in part due to the novel’s realistic and historically-accurate descriptions of event and attitudes towards slaves in the 1850’s. Perhaps the readers responded more to the emotional appeal to some of the novel’s less-than-accurate scenes.…

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    Uncle Tom’s Cabin is a novel that helped lay the foundation for the civil war. In Uncle Tom’s Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe, the author seeked to communicate to the readers that slavery is inhumane and should be abolished. The author does this by using the slave’s personal incidents, religion, and key characters. Stowe looks to communicate to her audience that slavery is morally wrong by using the slave’s personal incidents along with the way masters treated them, in which many cases they were…

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    In her novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin, the author Harriet Beecher Stowe accurately showed her readership her reasoning for advocating for the abolition of slavery by illustrating the heartlessness of slaveowners, the immorality of slavery under Christianity, and the wrongful stereotyping of slaves in this time period. Stowe showed her readers a more intimate view on how horribly slaves were treated by illustrating how rude and absolutley heartless slaveowners could be. In this time period, even some…

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    In Harriet Beecher Stowe’s anti-slavery novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin, Cassy and Eliza’s escape stories from slavery are explicitly explained in thorough detail. Eliza begins at the Shelby plantation in Kentucky, and makes her way to Canada after hearing about the selling of her son Harry. Cassy is introduced at Legree’s plantation in Louisiana and plans her escape after having enough of the terrible torture that Legree put her through and Tom’s refusal to kill him. Both women derive from two…

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    Uncle Tom's Cabin Thesis

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    born in Connecticut and has published over 25 books in her career. One of these books includes Uncle Tom’s Cabin which was a wildly popular book that displayed and spread the harsh realities of slavery. Uncle Tom’s Cabin contributed to the start of the Civil War because it’s popularity had a large influence on society and the reaction it caused in the South as well as the North. Uncle Tom's Cabin is a fiction novel based on realistic topics that takes place in Kentucky and Mississippi. Through…

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