Summary Of David S. Reynolds Mightier Than The Sword

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Mightier Than the Sword Mightier than the Sword was a book written by David S. Reynolds. Reynolds is the Bancroft Prize winning author of Walt Whitman’s America and a distinguished professor of English and American studies at the graduate center of the City University of New York. Professor Reynolds managed to study every aspect and outcome of Uncle Tom’s Cabin, and the ways it had made a change on much of the society. He mostly explains how Harriet Beecher Stowe managed to talk to the most important people at those times, and the characters who made of the book such an eye-opening piece. Reynolds goes on to explain and summarize for us the stories that Stowe used in her book. According to Reynolds, Uncle Tom’s Cabin is the most influential novel ever written by an American and that it molded their opinions like no other work. Harriet had a very religious family growing up, with her father being a minister. For which she was a very religious person herself, but it all changed in a way that she began to open her eyes and …show more content…

The bible was one of her main creditable sources for the whole book. But it would have been dangerous for her to reveal of her sources, the she wanted to protect her friends. “We’ve seen that all kinds of cultural phenomena-visionary fiction, biblical narratives, pro- and anti-Catholicism, gender issues, temperance, moral reform, minstrelsy-contributed to the novel, whose every character radiates multiple meanings” says Reynolds (87). She was always questioned on how she had delivered such stories on her book. William Paley published The Principles of Moral and Political Philosophy in which he came up with his own conclusions on antislavery, similar to Stowe. From slavery to Freedom, written by John Hope Franklin is a book in which like its tittle says it, it talked about the slaves and their way to freedom, something Stowe would’ve appreciated

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