Parallelism And Symbolism In 'Uncle Tom's Cabin'

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Roxanna White
Mrs. Taylor Sims
HIST 1301
15 December 14
Women, Men, and the Good Man Uncle Tom
Harriet Beecher Stowe (1811-1896) was a woman who grew up in a time of slavery under the heavy influence of the white man. She sought to spread her powerful abolitionist message of the humanization of slaves through her novel “Uncle Tom’s Cabin”, which uses structures of parallelism and contrast with slaves as sympathetic and moral human beings. From their small remarks, to their letters and even their own feelings towards their, more often than not, villainous masters, Stowe shows the slaves are sympathetic and real humans. Stowe goes on beyond this message to also portray women as the actively moral, men as the avaricious, and Uncle Tom as the exception to both.
Women often took the actively moral role in …show more content…

Although in truth abolitionists and feminists were never hand in hand. There were two sects of abolitionists; the American Anti-Slavery Society, who favored women in leadership positions, and the American and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society: who opposed women in leadership. “… Feminism demanded an expansion of freedom rather than a redefinition of the idea.” (Foner 459) This is where feminism and slavery differed while black and white alike had separate ideas of feminism versus slavery. Harriet Beecher Stowe succeeded in spreading her abolitionist and feminist message through the novel “Uncle Tom’s Cabin”. She does so by showing women as the morally just, men as their more aggressive counterparts (as opposed to the wife being the assumed counterpart), and creating a well-rounded Christian martyr of a slave man hero who transcended the races, Uncle Tom. Legree’s demoniacally evil ways also play an important role in shaping the end of the book along the lines of the traditional Christian

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