The Cambridge Companion to Harriet Beecher StoweCindy Weinstein The Cambridge Companion to Harriet Beecher Stowe establishes new parameters for both scholarly and classroom discussion of Beecher Stowe's writing and life. This collection of specially commissioned essays provides new perspectives on the frequently read classic Uncle Tom's Cabin, as well as on topics of perennial interest, such as Stowe's representation of race, her attitude to reform, and her relationship to the American novel. The volume investigates Stowe's impact on the American literary tradition and the novel of social change. Contributions also offer lucid and provocative readings that analyze Stowe's writings through a variety of contexts, including antebellum reform, regionalism, law and the protest novel. Fresh, accessible, and engaged, this is the most up to date introduction available to Stowe's work. The volume, which offers a comprehensive chronology of Stowe's life and a helpful guide to further reading, will be of interest to students and teachers alike. |
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... readings that analyze Stowe's writings through a variety of contexts, including antebellum reform, regionalism, law ... reading, will be of interest to students and teachers alike. The Cambridge Companion to Harriet Beecher Stowe For a list.
... readings that analyze Stowe's writings through a variety of contexts, including antebellum reform, regionalism, law ... reading, will be of interest to students and teachers alike. The Cambridge Companion to Harriet Beecher Stowe For a list.
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... Reading and children: Uncle Tom's Cabin and The Pearl of Orr's Island Gillian Brown 5 Uncle Tom and Harriet Beecher Stowe in England Audrey Fisch 6 Staging black insurrection: Dred on stage Judie Newman 7 Stowe and regionalism Marjorie ...
... Reading and children: Uncle Tom's Cabin and The Pearl of Orr's Island Gillian Brown 5 Uncle Tom and Harriet Beecher Stowe in England Audrey Fisch 6 Staging black insurrection: Dred on stage Judie Newman 7 Stowe and regionalism Marjorie ...
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... readers devastated by the fact that such brutal scenes were being enacted in slave states, but many readers for very different reasons were outraged by Stowe's depiction of them. Southern whites, in general, objected to Stowe's ...
... readers devastated by the fact that such brutal scenes were being enacted in slave states, but many readers for very different reasons were outraged by Stowe's depiction of them. Southern whites, in general, objected to Stowe's ...
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... readers committed to slavery, for example, were deeply unsettled upon reading the novel. Or why Senator Charles Sumner in his 1852 speech, “Freedom National, Slavery Sectional,” invoked Uncle Tom's Cabin in his argument against the ...
... readers committed to slavery, for example, were deeply unsettled upon reading the novel. Or why Senator Charles Sumner in his 1852 speech, “Freedom National, Slavery Sectional,” invoked Uncle Tom's Cabin in his argument against the ...
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... reading, twentiethcentury racial politics, and more. In doing so, the essays illuminate what Jane Tompkins calls the “cultural work” of Stowe's fiction by paying particular attention to Uncle Tom's Cabin and to the aesthetic and ...
... reading, twentiethcentury racial politics, and more. In doing so, the essays illuminate what Jane Tompkins calls the “cultural work” of Stowe's fiction by paying particular attention to Uncle Tom's Cabin and to the aesthetic and ...
Contents
Uncle Toms Cabin and the south | |
Uncle Toms Cabin and | |
Uncle Tom and Harriet Beecher Stowe in England | |
Dred on stage | |
Stowe and regionalism | |
Stowe and the | |
Harriet Beecher Stowe and the American reform | |
Harriet Beecher Stowe and the dream of the great | |
Stowe and the literature of social change | |
The afterlife of Uncle Toms Cabin | |
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Common terms and phrases
abolitionism abolitionist African Americans American Literature American novel American Renaissance antebellum anti antislavery antislavery novel argues Bible Boston British Cambridge Companion Captain Kittridge characters Chartism child Christian Clare Clayton critics Dismal Swamp Dred Dred’s edited Eliza England essay Eva’s fact feel fiction Frederick Douglass freedom Fugitive Slave Fugitive Slave Act gender Harriet Beecher Stowe Hedrick Hentz human imagine John Judith Fetterley Key to Uncle Lawson Legree literary Mara Mara’s Martin Delany Mary Minister’s Wooing Moses narrative narrator NineteenthCentury northern Oldtown Oldtown Fireside Stories Oldtown Folks Ophelia Orr’s Island Oxford University Press Pearl of Orr’s play plot political popular present proslavery published race racial readers reading real presence reform regionalism regionalist representation Sam’s scene Senator sentimental slavery southern Stowe’s novel sympathy Tale Theatre Topsy Topsy’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin Victorian wife woman women words writing York