Uncle Tom's Cabin.

By Harriet Beecher Stowe

Printed: Circa 1950

Publisher: Odhams Press. London

Dimensions 13 × 19 × 3 cm
Language

Language: English

Size (cminches): 13 x 19 x 3

£34.00
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Item information

Description

Red cloth binding with gilt title on the spine.

F.B.A. provides an in-depth photographic presentation of this item to stimulate your feeling and touch. More traditional book descriptions are immediately available.

A lovely copy of this fascinating book.

Uncle Tom’s Cabin: or, Life Among the Lowly is an anti-slavery novel by American author Harriet Beecher Stowe. Published in two volumes in 1852, the novel had a profound effect on attitudes toward African Americans and slavery in the U.S. and is said to have “helped lay the groundwork for the [American] Civil War”.

Stowe, a Connecticut-born woman of English descent, was part of the religious Beecher family and an active abolitionist. She wrote the sentimental novel to depict the reality of slavery while also asserting that Christian love could overcome slavery. The novel focuses on the character of Uncle Tom, a long-suffering black slave around whom the stories of the other characters revolve.

In the United States, Uncle Tom’s Cabin was the best-selling novel and the second best-selling book of the 19th century, following the Bible. It is credited with helping fuel the abolitionist cause in the 1850s. The influence attributed to the book was so great that a likely apocryphal story arose of Abraham Lincoln meeting Stowe at the start of the Civil War and declaring, “So this is the little lady who started this great war.”

The book and the plays it inspired helped popularize a number of negative stereotypes about black people including that of the namesake character “Uncle Tom“. The term came to be associated with an excessively subservient person. These later associations with Uncle Tom’s Cabin have, to an extent, overshadowed the historical effects of the book as a “vital antislavery tool”. However, the novel remains a “landmark” in protest literature, with later books such as The Jungle by Upton Sinclair and Silent Spring by Rachel Carson owing a large debt to it.

Harriet Elisabeth Beecher Stowe; June 14, 1811 – July 1, 1896) was an American author and abolitionist. She came from the religious Beecher family and became best known for her novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin (1852), which depicts the harsh conditions experienced by enslaved African Americans. The book reached an audience of millions as a novel and play, and became influential in the United States and in Great Britain, energizing anti-slavery forces in the American North, while provoking widespread anger in the South. Stowe wrote 30 books, including novels, three travel memoirs, and collections of articles and letters. She was influential both for her writings and for her public stances and debates on social issues of the day.

Condition notes

Wear on headband.

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