Uncle Tom's Cabin Questions on Slavery

Uncle Tom's Cabin

The lesson that can be learned from Uncle Tom's Cabin is that slavery is wrong. It is an evil institution and, as Stowe suggests, incompatible with the Christian religion.

3 educator answers

Uncle Tom's Cabin

Harriet Beecher Stowe's "Uncle Tom's Cabin" was the most significant piece of work in American history.

7 educator answers

Uncle Tom's Cabin

Historians typically say that Harriet Beecher Stowe’s novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin had a tremendous impact on the North.  Abraham Lincoln supposedly greeted her by saying, “So you're the little...

2 educator answers

Uncle Tom's Cabin

Stowe shows the incompatibility of slavery with Christian love and tolerance by showing the unloving behavior of slave owners, particularly in their treatment of slaves, and also by depicting how...

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Uncle Tom's Cabin

"Mammy" in Stowe's work is actually Aunt Chloe, who is Tom's wife.  She is his wife as well as the mother of his children.  Like Tom, she is a slave, a part of a culture that renders her...

1 educator answer

Uncle Tom's Cabin

Harriet Beecher Stowe condemns slavery in every way in this novel, which was written as a polemic, with the purpose of persuading white readers that even under the best circumstances, slavery was a...

2 educator answers

Uncle Tom's Cabin

Uncle Tom's Cabin significantly influenced American society and literature by highlighting the harsh realities of slavery, galvanizing the abolitionist movement, and contributing to the growing...

6 educator answers

Uncle Tom's Cabin

The main reason that slavery is so bad for the master is because it corrupts everyone involved, including the slaves. The masters must keep their slaves in a state of ignorance and degradation to...

3 educator answers

Uncle Tom's Cabin

The main idea of Uncle Tom's Cabin is that slavery is an evil that needs to be abolished.

1 educator answer

Uncle Tom's Cabin

Stowe primarily contrasts slave owners, and this supports her anti-slavery theme. While in her time many people supported slavery by arguing that the majority of slaveowners were good to their...

1 educator answer

Uncle Tom's Cabin

The play differs from the book in its focus on action, rather than character development.

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Uncle Tom's Cabin

Frankenstein and the monster:

3 educator answers

Uncle Tom's Cabin

In Uncle Tom's Cabin, Harriet Beecher Stowe employs literary devices such as symbolism and characterization to depict slavery's evils. She uses religious themes, portraying Uncle Tom as a Christ-like...

3 educator answers

Uncle Tom's Cabin

I think that Stowe's background helped her end up constructing a novel like Uncle Tom's Cabin.  Her childhood of a daughter of a preacher, immersed in Christian theology, and being around...

2 educator answers

Uncle Tom's Cabin

In Uncle Tom's Cabin, Harriet Beecher Stowe portrays white southerners with a range of characters, from benevolent to cruel, highlighting the moral complexities within the institution of slavery. She...

2 educator answers