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Uncle Tom's Cabin (Author Biography)

 
Notes on Novels: Uncle Tom's Cabin (Author Biography)

Contents:

Introduction
Plot Summary
Characters
Themes
Style
Historical Context
Critical Overview
Criticism
Sources
For Further Study


Author Biography

Stowe seemed destined to write a powerful protest novel like Uncle Tom's Cabin: Her father was Lyman Beecher, a prominent evangelical preacher, and her siblings were preachers and social reformers. Born in 1811 in Litchfield, Connecticut, Stowe moved with her family at the age of twenty-one to Cincinnati, where she lived for eighteen years. In Cincinnati, across the Ohio River from slaveholding Kentucky, Stowe was exposed to the institution of slavery. Although she made just one brief trip to Kentucky — her only personal contact with the South — she knew freed and fugitive slaves in Cincinnati. She also had friends who participated in the underground railroad, the secret system for aiding runaway slaves in their flight to freedom. Stowe learned about slave life by talking to these people and by reading various materials, including slave narratives and antislavery tracts. She also saw Northern racial prejudice. Stowe began writing while living in Cincinnati. In 1836, she married Calvin Ellis Stowe, a distinguished biblical scholar and theology professor, and they had seven children. After marrying, Stowe continued to write, supplementing her husband's limited earnings.

In 1850, the United States Congress voted to pass the Fugitive Slave Law, which prohibited Northerners from helping slaves escape and required them to return slaves to their masters in the South. Stowe, having moved to Brunswick, Maine with her family, had been planning to write a protest of slavery since her experiences in Cincinnati. The passage of the Fugitive Slave Law proved a powerful catalyst. She began work on Uncle Tom's Cabin and published it first in serial form in the abolitionist magazine The National Era. The first installment appeared on June 5, 1851, but before the serial could be completed, the novel came out in a two-volume set in March 1852. The book became an immediate and extraordinary success, selling over one million copies in America and England before the year was out. Thus, Stowe became the most famous American woman writer of her day.

In the United States, the novel incited controversy from both Northerners and Southerners: Northerners felt that Stowe portrayed the slave-holding South too kindly, while Southerners believed Stowe condemned their way of life. In 1853, responsing to criticism that her novel was not grounded in reality, Stowe published A Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin, in which she pointed to factual documents — newspaper articles, court records, state laws — to substantiate her portrayal of slavery in Uncle Tom's Cabin. Less than a decade after the publication of Uncle Tom's Cabin, the Civil War began, largely due to the conflict over slavery. President Abraham Lincoln, upon meeting Stowe in 1862, is said to have declared: "So this is the little lady who brought on this big war." Stowe died on July 1, 1896, in Hartford, Connecticut, and is buried in Andover, Massachusetts. In spite of having published many works before and after its momentous appearance, she is remembered mainly for Uncle Tom's Cabin.


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