Examples Of Feminism In Uncle Toms Cabin

1428 Words3 Pages

To find out whether or not Harriet Beecher Stowe’s book, Uncle Tom’s Cabin is an example of feminist rhetoric or not, one must simply define what is meant by the term feminist. This is difficult to do when one puts into consideration that this book was written over one hundred and forty years ago, and that feminism has gone through many different stages since that time. In order to do this correctly, one must first define feminism within the historical context of the 1850's, when Uncle Tom's Cabin was published instead of the definition of feminism in today’s times.
Feminism was not commonly known or associated with women’s rights in the 1850’s. In the time that Stowe published this anti-slavery book, it was a main issue. From the freedom of the slaves to the Women’s Rights movement. The movement was led by women known as Susan B. Anthony, Lucy Stone, and Elizabeth Stanton.
Women’s suffrage was first proposed into the United States in 1848 at the first women’s rights convention in Seneca Falls, only two years before Uncle Tom’s Cabin was published. The Women’s Rights movement of this time advocated for a declaration of sentiments for the Declaration of Independence to adopt a women’s suffrage resolution as well as more liberal divorce laws, less restrictive clothing, coeducation, and the right for a married women to control their property.
Although, this was seventy years before women were granted the right to vote by the Nineteenth Amendment of the Constitution. The Women’s Rights movement was taking place during the time that Stowe wrote Uncle Tom’s Cabin.
One of the major issues throughout the novel was motherhood and the importance of motherly duties. At the end of the novel Stowe empowers women, in the role of mothers, t...

... middle of paper ...

...hange. In order for Uncle Tom's Cabin to be viewed not only as an abolitionist novel but as a feminist novel, it would have to challenge women's roles as exclusively domestic or private. Stowe fails to do this. Though she does address and discuss many women's issues, she falls short of a feminist perspective because of this failure. She does not allow her female characters to stand within society outside of their private domain. Stowe does empower women within the private sector with indirect influence over society through their roles as wives and mothers, but does not allow this power to stand on its own in the public sphere. Because of this and because of the emphasis that the women's rights movement of Stowe's time placed on women's inclusion in the public sphere, Uncle Tom's Cabin, though certainly an abolitionist one, cannot be considered a feminist novel.

More about Examples Of Feminism In Uncle Toms Cabin

Open Document