Uncle
Sam is a popular name for United States of America. This name is associated
with ideas of power, control and dictatorship. USA exerted this authority on
the whole world and was therefore never liked by people of other countries. The
situation however in the United States was not always so rosy and pleasant. Its
people who came from all over the world, considering it a land of
opportunities, were not treated as equals. Those who were given the color black
to their skin by God were considered slaves and lived a life of indignity and
exploitation.
Uncle
Tom is an equally popular name that relates to USA and this name too does not
show USA in good light. Uncle Tom is the chief character of the famous novel
‘Uncle Tom’s Cabin’ written by Ms Harriet Beechter Stowe in 1852. It was
revolutionary for its passionate evocation and indictment of the practice slavery
in American society. The author presented Uncle Tom as ‘a man of humanity’. He was
also the first black hero in American fiction. Uncle Tom’s Cabin had several
characters that attained iconic status; Simon Legree, Little Eva and Topsy
Sambo are even today American bywords. They made a heartrending and a dirty
picture of America, which showed blacks as a tradable commodity and as people
who ‘don’t have the same feelings as we do’. It was a society divided into only
four categories slave catchers, slave traders, slave owners and those who
aspired to own slaves.
Uncle
Tom’s Cabin emphasized that slavery was an unchristian practice and both cannot
exist together. Ms Stowe accentuated benevolence as a feminine trait and also
called outraged feminine feeling as the widest opposition to slavery. Little
Eva, daughter of dissolute and weak Augustus comes across as sensitive and
saintly whereas Mr Shelby sells Uncle Tom to the negro trader Haley and Simon
Legree and his brutish black attendants beat him to death. At his death, Uncle
Tom with his Christian meekness stands up to Legree as morally superior wholly
perfect human being.
Ms
Harriet Beechter Stowe, the author was born in Connecticut in 1811 and was
brought up on tales of devotions, Christian charity and brotherhood. She was
exposed to slavery, race riots, runaway slaves early in her life. She moved to
Maine, after her marriage and joined Bowdain College as a professor. She wrote
this novel as a reaction to the passage of Fugitive Slave Act. It became one of
the most-sold books of 19th century, was translated into 37
languages and was reviewed by renowned figures like Thomas Macaulay, George
Sand and Heinrich Heine. She wrote several novels however only Uncle Tom’s
Cabin has survived.
Ms
Stowe was always outspoken on controversial moral issues like temperance, women’s
suffrage and of course slavery. Perhaps her early religious training aided her
to be fearless and confident. She enjoyed friendship of several greats of
English literature like Lady Byron and George Eliot. Mark Twain was her neighbor.
Leo Tolstoy admired her book and called her ‘a brilliant soldier in the
liberation war of Humanity . The greatest tribute to her came from Abraham
Lincoln who greeted her at the White House in 1863 as “The Little woman who
started this great revolution’.
Information never heard off before. Thanks Sir.
ReplyDeleteVery well-written sir..Uncle Tom's Cabin has always been one of my favorites ever since the time I read it in school..It was an interesting and emotional read..As you have said, this book went on to start the war and subsequently led to the death of Abraham Lincoln..In fact, Uncle Tom's cabin was the second best-selling book in the 20th century, next only to The Bible..
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