45 episodes

Uncle Tom’s Cabin is one of the most controversial novels of the last century, with it’s sentimental portrayal of the anti-slavery movement in the USA. Written in 1852, the novel instantly rose to fame and split Americans up and down the country. Stowe was a passionate abolitionist and was inspired to write Uncle Tom when she spent time in Cincinnati in the early part of the 18th century. She met many slaves who had escaped from Kentucky and was touched by the friendships she built. It was with this sentiment that the novel was born and the deep empathy Stowe had for slaves is evident throughout.

As you would expect, the book was hugely provocative with pro-slavery supporters outraged by the negative portrayal of masters within the slave trade. It was said to be so incendiary that Abraham Lincoln claimed Stowe to be "the little lady who started this great war". It is not clear if that quote is genuine but the hype Stowe created both before and after the civil war is definitely real. The novel follows the story of long suffering slave Tom and mother and son duo Eliza and Harry. Whilst Tom is sold down the river by his master, Eliza and her son manage to escape the clutches of slavery.

There is no doubt in the genuineness of Howe’s wish to uncover the slave trade for all of its sins. Pleasingly the book ends with an optimistic outlook, one that shook the government at the time and one sure to shake you.

Uncle Tom's Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe Loyal Books

    • Society & Culture

Uncle Tom’s Cabin is one of the most controversial novels of the last century, with it’s sentimental portrayal of the anti-slavery movement in the USA. Written in 1852, the novel instantly rose to fame and split Americans up and down the country. Stowe was a passionate abolitionist and was inspired to write Uncle Tom when she spent time in Cincinnati in the early part of the 18th century. She met many slaves who had escaped from Kentucky and was touched by the friendships she built. It was with this sentiment that the novel was born and the deep empathy Stowe had for slaves is evident throughout.

As you would expect, the book was hugely provocative with pro-slavery supporters outraged by the negative portrayal of masters within the slave trade. It was said to be so incendiary that Abraham Lincoln claimed Stowe to be "the little lady who started this great war". It is not clear if that quote is genuine but the hype Stowe created both before and after the civil war is definitely real. The novel follows the story of long suffering slave Tom and mother and son duo Eliza and Harry. Whilst Tom is sold down the river by his master, Eliza and her son manage to escape the clutches of slavery.

There is no doubt in the genuineness of Howe’s wish to uncover the slave trade for all of its sins. Pleasingly the book ends with an optimistic outlook, one that shook the government at the time and one sure to shake you.

    Chapter 01

    Chapter 01

    More great books at LoyalBooks.com

    • 25 min
    Chapter 02

    Chapter 02

    More great books at LoyalBooks.com

    • 7 min
    Chapter 03

    Chapter 03

    More great books at LoyalBooks.com

    • 12 min
    Chapter 04

    Chapter 04

    More great books at LoyalBooks.com

    • 28 min
    Chapter 05

    Chapter 05

    More great books at LoyalBooks.com

    • 20 min
    Chapter 06

    Chapter 06

    More great books at LoyalBooks.com

    • 21 min

Top Podcasts In Society & Culture

Lost Loverboy Podcast
Demetri Wiley
Dear Women In STEM
Lilian Judy
THAT ZED PODCAST
THAT ZED PODCAST
The Agent
Imperative Entertainment
Marriage Counselor's Corner: Marriage Advice From a Real Marriage Counselor
David Taylor, LMHC: Licensed Mental Health Counselor, Relationship Coach, Husband
The Life of a Teenage Girl
Emma Mye

More by Books Should Be Free

As a Man Thinketh by James Allen
Loyal Books
The Communist Manifesto by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels
Loyal Books
The Antichrist by Friedrich Nietzsche
Loyal Books
Arthur Mervyn by Charles Brockden Brown
Loyal Books
Jude the Obscure by Thomas Hardy
Loyal Books
Robinson Crusoe Written Anew for Children by Daniel Defoe
Loyal Books