Friday, February 8, 2019
The Strength of Uncle Toms Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe :: Uncle Toms Cabin
The Power of Uncle tomcats Cabin Harriet Beecher Stowes novel, Uncle tomcats Cabin, has had a tremendous impact on American culture, twain then and now. It is still considered a controversial novel, and many an(prenominal) secondary schools stand banned it from their libraries. What makes it such a controversial novel? One movement would have been that the novel is full of melodrama, and many people considered it a ape of the truth. Others said that she did not show the horror of slavery enough, that she showed the softer side of it throughout most of her novel. Regardless of the varying opinions of its readers, it is obvious that its impact was large. For instance many of the characters in the book have become the stereotypes of slavery in the South. An lawsuit of this is Uncle Tom himself, whose name was eventually degraded into a nickname for denses who were likewise subservient to whites. He became the stereotype of the passive slave who would do anything his senior pilot told him, because it was his duty as a slave. However few remember how the medium of his faith was what allowed him to tolerate the horrors that were enacted upon him. Another example of the stereotyping of Stowes characters is Aunt Chloe, Uncle Toms wife, and her children. Aunt Chloe is an excellent example because she has become the Aunt Jemima stereotype. She had a round, black, shining face and wore a checkered headscarf, and she worked in the kitchen, took care of the kitchen, and fundamentally ran the household. Not to mention for many years black children were still class as mischievous like Mose, Pete, and, later in the novel, Topsy. Even the slave owners and traders are stereotypes now. Mr. Shelby and his wife have become the gentlemen and lady slave holders, who command themselves as dangerous Christian people and attempt to take good care of their slaves, but still dont see black people as equal to whites. Simon Legree has become the stereotypical cruel mas ter, who allow his estate go to hell, but continued to work his slaves too with child(p) and beat them senseless (or, in Toms and others cases, to death) when they did not behave as he thought they should. However at that place are other ways this novel has been influential to American culture. by and by its publishing it helped spread the ideas of the abolitionist movement.
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