One hundred years after Harriet Beecher Stowe published
Uncle Tom’s Cabin in 1852, the poet Langston
Hughes called the novel, “the most cussed and
discussed book of its time.” Hughes’s observation
is particularly apt in that it avoids any mention of
the novel’s literary merit. George Orwell famously
called it, “the best bad book of the age.”
Uncle Tom’s Cabin is arguably no Pride
and Prejudice or The Scarlet Letter. Leo Tolstoy is
one of the few critics who praise it unabashedly, calling
Uncle Tom’s Cabin a model of the “highest
type” of art because it flowed from love of God
and man. So why has it been called “a verbal earthquake,
an ink-and-paper tidal wave”? How and why has
it been so influential?
Uncle Tom’s Cabin, or Life Among the Lowly,
is at heart a typical nineteenth-century melodrama of
cruelty, suffering, religious devotion, broken homes,
and improbable reunions. The plot in brief: the slave
Uncle Tom is sold away from his cabin and family on
the Shelby plantation in Kentucky; he serves the St.
Clare family in Louisiana, from which he is sold after
the death of Eva and her father; he lands at the Legree
plantation on the Red River where he is whipped to death
rather than betray two runaway slaves. Meanwhile some
slaves escape (Eliza on ice floes across the Ohio River)
and find long-lost relatives; others kill themselves
and their children. The white characters discuss politics
and religion. Everybody weeps.
Uncle Tom’s Cabin has been cussed and
discussed since May 8, 1851, when the novel’s
first installment appeared in abolitionist Gamaliel
Bailey’s Washington, DC weekly, The National Era.
Cussers include Southerners such as William Gilmore
Simms who considered the novel a libelous hodgepodge
of bad research and flat-out lies; Reverend Joel Parker,
who threatened to sue Stowe for the “dastardly
attack” on his character; Charles Dickens, who
wondered if Stowe patterned Eva on his Little Nell;
and James Baldwin, who bemoaned the sentimentality and
the powerlessness of Uncle Tom. Discussers include everybody
else: Frederick Douglass, Ralph Waldo Emerson, George
Eliot, Horace Mann, Mark Twain, Charles Dudley Warner,
Henry James, and in modern times, Richard Wright, Harold
Bloom, Elaine Showalter, Ann Douglas, Henry Louis Gates,
Jr., and John Updike, who confessed to having never
read the novel until he reviewed it in The New Yorker
in 2006.
Nearly everyone agrees that the reason for Uncle
Tom’s Cabin’s initial influence was
a matter of timing. Its author, Harriet Beecher Stowe,
was the perfect combination of magpie, shrewd political
operator, and grieving mother. After the Fugitive Slave
Act of 1850, the time was right for an anti-slavery
novel and Stowe wrote one (though she claimed later
that God himself held the pen). But Stowe’s beliefs
about slavery’s effects on family did not simply
manifest themselves in a fictional story. The brutal
facts of slavery did not automatically translate themselves
into an effective political tract. The reading public
may have been primed and ready for the right anti-slavery
story to come along and simply “touch a nerve”
or “strike a chord,” but why was this novel
the “right” story?
Sales and readership figures demonstrate Uncle Tom’s
Cabin’s popular appeal. Readership of The
National Era jumped from 17,000 to 28,000 during the
story’s serialization. On March 20, 1852, John
J. Jewett & Co. published the first one-volume edition
of Uncle Tom’s Cabin and sold 5000 copies
in two days. Over 100,000 copies were sold by the end
of the summer and 300,000 by March 1853. One Southern
literary critic credited new technology for the novel’s
sales figures, which relied on “steam-presses,
steam-ships, steam-carriages, iron roads, electric telegraphs,
and universal peace among the reading nations of the
earth.” Hundreds of editions and millions of copies
have been sold around the world. Uncle Tom’s
Cabin remains the world’s second most translated
book, after the Bible.
The literary influence of Stowe’s novel is evidenced
by the immortality of Uncle Tom, Eliza, Little Eva,
Simon Legree, and Topsy. These characters exist beyond
Stowe’s tale; they have become literary archetypes.
Uncle Tom began as a Christ figure—a character
like Jesus who loves God, loves his tormentors, turns
the other cheek, and shows inhuman forbearance in the
face of cruelty—but has been transformed into
the perfect, silver-haired, silent, sexless, stalwart
servant. Eliza remains, however, the model of the desperate
mother who will leap across the ice to save her child.
The name “Simon Legree” is shorthand for
any cruel overseer. Topsy is the avatar of the mischief-maker,
the magic urchin who asserts her own alien status, claiming,
“I spect I grow’d. Don’t think nobody
never made me.” These characters appeared in popular
poems, cartoons, and songs within weeks. Dramatic versions
of Uncle Tom’s Cabin appeared within
months; George L. Aiken’s stage production remained
the most popular play in England and America for seventy-five
years. Henry James compared the many spin-offs Stowe’s
novel provoked to “a wonderful leaping fish”
that “fluttered down” around the globe.
Modern theatergoers may know “The Small Cabin
of Uncle Thomas,” the version that appears in
Rodgers and Hammerstein’s musical "The King
and I."
The political influence of Uncle Tom’s Cabin
can be measured by who talked about it or who used it
as a rationale for action. Exhibit A is the remark supposedly
made by President Lincoln when he met Stowe in 1862:
“So you’re the little woman who wrote the
book that started this Great War.” True or not,
its circulation is testament to both Lincoln’s
and Stowe’s sense of public relations. Exhibit
B is everyone else who saw Uncle Tom’s Cabin
as revolutionary. Frederick Douglass wrote of Uncle
Tom’s Cabin that “nothing could have
better suited the moral and humane requirements of the
hour. Its effect was amazing, instantaneous, and universal.”
It was banned in the South and nearly banned by the
Vatican. It was also banned in tsarist Russia, but apparently
Uncle Tom’s Cabin was Lenin’s favorite
book as a youth. Woodrow Wilson wrote that Uncle Tom’s
Cabin “played no small part in creating the anti-slavery
party.” Yet in the twentieth century, Malcolm
X suggested that it wasn’t radical enough, claiming
that Martin Luther King, Jr. was a “modern”
Uncle Tom, “who is doing the same thing today,
to keep Negroes defenseless in the face of an attack.”
Rather than “a book that made history,”
Uncle Tom’s Cabin is a novel that matters
because it is still provokes argument. Many modern readers
wish Uncle Tom would stop praying and serving and do
something. W.E.B. DuBois saw Tom’s “deep
religious fatalism” as an example of the stunted
ethical growth endemic to plantation existence, where
“habits of shiftlessness took root, and sullen
hopelessness replaced hopeful strife.” In Nabokov’s
Lolita, the porter who carries the bags to the hotel
room where Humbert Humbert will first have his way with
his young stepdaughter is called “Uncle Tom.”
He will not get involved. Unfounded as the term and
the application may be, “Uncle Tom” remains,
even today, the standard epithet for any black man who
serves whites and does not carry a gun. Indeed, in recent
history, the term as been applied to Dr. King, Clarence
Thomas, Colin Powell, and Barack Obama.
Much of the cussing and discussing of Harriet Beecher
Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin comes
from those who haven’t actually read the book.
Those who have know that the power of Stowe’s
novel resides in the dozens of her characters who enter
our consciousness by acting fully human: Senator Bird,
who reluctantly agrees that the letter of the Fugitive
Slave Law does not trump his Christian duty to break
the law and help the runaway Eliza and her son; Marie
St. Clare, vain and whiny, who sees her daughter Eva’s
death as a personal affront; Ophelia, the prim Vermonter
who finds slavery and blacks equally abhorrent; Augustine
St. Clare and Arthur Shelby, thoughtful and good-hearted
but utterly weak; and Sam, whose “comic inefficiency,”
critic Kenneth Lynn writes, “no American author
before Mrs. Stowe had realized…could constitute
a studied insult to the white man’s intelligence.”
To read and take seriously the entirety of Uncle
Tom’s Cabin is to see why it matters not
as an historical or political phenomenon but as a relentless
and passionate work of literary fiction.
Bibliography:
Briggs, Charles. “Uncle Tomitudes” [unsigned],
Putnam’s Monthly, January 1853.
DuBois, W.E.B. Souls of Black Folk. Chapter
X, “Faith of our Fathers,” 140.
Furnas, J.C. Goodbye to Uncle Tom. Ann Arbor,
MI: W. Sloane Associates, 1956.
Douglass, Frederick. Life and Times of Frederick
Douglass Written by Himself (facsimile edition).
New York: Citadel Press, 1983. 289.
James, Henry. A Small Boy and Others. New York:
Charles Scribners Sons, 1913.
Lynn, Kenneth, ed. Uncle Tom’s Cabin.
Cambridge: Belknap Press, 1962.
Nabokov, Vladimir. Lolita. New York: Random
House, c1992.
Parfait, Claire. The Publishing History of Uncle
Tom’s Cabin, 1852-2002. Ashgate Press.
Service, Robert. Lenin: A Biography. Boston:
Harvard University Press, 2002.
Tolstoy, Leo, What is Art? (reprint edition,
originally published 1896) Indianapolis: Hackett Publishing
Company, 1996. N152.
Wilson, Woodrow, Division and Reunion, 1829-1889.
New York: Logmans, Green, and Company, 1893. 181.
Malcolm X interviews from "The Negro and the American
Promise," WGBH, 1963. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/mlk/sfeature/sf_video.html
Hollis Robbins, Ph.D, is the co-editor
with Henry Louis Gates, Jr. of The Annotated Uncle
Tom's Cabin (W.W. Norton, 2006) and The Selected
Writings of William Wells Brown (Oxford University
Press, 2006) with Paula Garret. She is a member of the
Humanities Faculty at The Peabody Institute of The Johns
Hopkins University.
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