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"Uncle Tom's Cabin": Evil, Affliction and Redemptive Love

Part of the Twayne's masterwork studies series
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Exploring themes of oppression in Harriet Beecher Stowe's abolitionist novel, "Uncle Tom's Cabin", the author attempts to draw an analogy between the novel's subject and contemporary struggles, especially feminism.

She explains why Lincoln said the novel caused the Civil War, and discusses Stowe's Christian theology, political views and personal life and their relationship with the novel's content.

Further, she argues the importance of the book's literary realism, and why the hero of the novel came to be regarded as more than just an "Uncle Tom".

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Product Details
Twayne Publishers Inc.,U.S.
0805780955 / 9780805780956
Hardback
813.3
01/01/1991
United States
144 pages
146 x 222 mm, 344 grams
Professional & Vocational/Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly/Undergraduate Learn More