Jul 6, 2010
Fearing heavy-handed moralism, I have spent my adult life avoiding Uncle Tom’s Cabin.
I recently got up my courage to brave the didacticism, however: to great reward, as the wise old slave is good company.
Harriet Beecher Stowe, the “little lady who started this big war” as Lincoln called her, is didactic in patches. The scenes that provoke our rage are not the genius of the book, however. Anyone can engender tears over scenes of mamas and children wrenched from each other’s arms on the auction block.
Stowe’s achievement is to reveal subtly and artfully the myriad ways the legal tolerance of slavery enervates, corrupts and ultimately enslaves society at large and everyone it touches –even those who oppose the institution.