answersLogoWhite

0

The South had already felt increasingly under seige by abolitionist attacks on slavery. The fact that the novel recieved popular adulation and admiration in the North added to the South's increasing sense of alienation and intensified their efforts to defend slavery. Southerners claimed it was false and that the main character "Tom" was too christ-like to actually ever exist. Many pro-slavery advocates wrote books to try and counter what Uncle Tom's Cabin considered the realities of slavery. This book increased sectionalism and hatred between the North and South in the pre-civil war era.

User Avatar

Wiki User

12y ago

What else can I help you with?