Uncle Tom's Cabin

"The Book That Made This Great War"

When Harriet Beecher Stowe met with President Abraham Lincoln at the White House in 1862, he supposedly greeted her by saying, 鈥淪o you鈥檙e the little woman who wrote the book that made this great war.鈥 Her book, Uncle Tom鈥檚 Cabin; or, Life Among the Lowly, published precisely one decade before her meeting with Lincoln fundamentally changed, previously ambivalent, Northerner鈥檚 attitudes towards the institution of slavery. The tome proved to be so popular, that the only book that earned greater sales numbers than Uncle Tom鈥檚 Cabin during the latter half of the 19th century was the Bible. While her book made many abolitionists, harmful stereotypes proliferated by the work have marred its legacy today.

After the passage of the 1850 Fugitive Slave Act, longtime abolitionist, Harriet Beecher Stowe was inspired to write a novel to persuade Americans against the evils of the institution of slavery. Stowe drew from numerous sources for inspiration. She used the 1849 book The Life of Josiah Henson, Formerly a Slave, Now an Inhabitant of Canada, as Narrated by Himself as her primary source for her novel, Josiah Henson later became known as 鈥淯ncle Tom鈥 and the modern-day 鈥渟ite of Uncle Tom鈥檚 Cabin鈥 is actually a cabin near the plantation Henson was a slave. Henson鈥檚 slave narrative was not the only inspiration for the work. Stowe also researched the plight of escaped slaves by privately interviewing people she knew had escaped from plantations.

Illustration from the 1853 version of Uncle Tom's Cabin depicting Tom and Eva

Stowe wrote Uncle Tom鈥檚 Cabin as a 鈥渟entimental novel,鈥 the most popular genre during the mid-eighteenth century, which elicited an emotional response from the reader. Though these works were not usually celebrated critically, they were very popular among the public鈥攅specially women, who were leaders in the abolitionist movement. Stowe鈥檚 work is dominated by heavy-handed symbolism鈥攅very character, character action, and location in work directly symbolize archetypes she had identified within America at the time. It tells the story of Uncle Tom, a good and kind slave. While being transported downriver, Tom saves a pure white girl named Little Eva. To thank Tom for his good deed, Eva鈥檚 father purchases Tom. Tom befriends Eva, but she is very sickly. On her death bed Eva begs her father to free his slaves, he makes the promise, but before he can do so, he is killed outside of a caf, and the evil Simon Legree becomes Tom鈥檚 new owner. Legree demands Tom divulge the location of runaway slaves. Tom refuses, and he is whipped to death. By dying to save others, Stowe makes a direct comparison to Jesus Christ. Many characters are analogous to real-life characters that the author wanted to critique. Miss Ophelia parodies the white moderate; the Senator parodies those who remain complacent to the status quo, Simon Legree is meant to show the brutality of deep south slave owners. While Stowe鈥檚 work is not one of subtlety, the characters resonated with Americans.

Poster for a 19th century "Tom Show"

The book was controversial and largely hated in the South and read widely in the North. The novel was massively influential and became the model for countless protest novels including Upton Sinclair鈥檚 The Jungle. The book was not nearly as successful after the end of the war; it was not until the Civil Rights movement of the mid-twentieth century that the book was read widely once again. Many Civil Rights leaders critiqued the novel for reinforcing hateful stereotypes. Stowe depicts slaves who embody popular stereotypes of black Americans in the mid-nineteenth century including the 鈥渉appy darky,鈥 鈥渢he tragic mulatto,鈥 鈥渕ammy,鈥 and most famously, it constructed the stereotype of the 鈥淯ncle Tom.鈥 While Stowe intended Tom to be Christlike, forgiving those who condemned him to death, many read his character as a slave who bowed down and gave in to the white slaveowner. This stereotype was expanded by post-war minstrel shows which replaced the death of Tom with Tom reconciling with his oppressors. Stowe never licensed any version of her book to be shown dramatically; as a result, directors took liberties with the work and many shows fundamentally changed the plot and characters. Over three million Americas saw what became known as 鈥淭om Shows.鈥 In comparison, more than ten times as many Americas saw Tom Shows than read the book.

While the passage of time has complicated the legacy of Uncle Tom鈥檚 Cabin, the book no doubt was a significant factor in the North鈥檚 realignment from moderate to abolitionist. Modern black literary critic Henry Louis Gates Jr. argued that despite its apparent faults, 鈥淸Uncle Tom鈥檚 Cabin is a] central document in American race relations and a significant moral and political exploration of the character of those relations.鈥

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