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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 6 page paper talks about slavery and racial issues as it concerns the Stowe work. Slavery is discussed and Stowe's treatment of it is the focus of the paper. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA148Sto.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
it concerns the Stowe work. Slavery is discussed and Stowes treatment of it is the focus of the paper. Bibliography lists 3 sources. SA148Sto.rtf
Many authors write novels and incorporate the horrific goings on of the day. Sisters Angelina Grinke and Sarah Moore Grinke, for example, shed light on
the horrors of slavery, and in writings and speech, urged slaveholders to let go of those human beings that they held captive. They appealed to the consciences of the men
who perpetuated slavery and invoked the ideas of God in terms of why slaves should be freed immediately. The Grinke sisters were rather bold and determined but they were not
the only ones to write about this issue. There had been a great many activists against slavery at the time, one of
whom was Harriet Beecher Stowe, author of the infamous Uncle Toms Cabin. But while Stowe was a writer, she was somewhat a legend in her own time. Abraham Lincoln not
only greeted her but remarked that she was the little woman who had caused trouble with the book Uncle Toms Cabin (Dukes 24). Some have said that the meeting,
and the book, had influenced Lincoln in his making his Gettysburg address (24). Indeed, books are influential, and Stowe wrote quite a political piece on the injustices of slavery. Although
that is the case, she did not write using inflammatory rhetoric. Rather, she wrote with objectivity and candor. She told the story as she saw fit, and the truth was
something that would eventually set the slaves free. Indeed, people were horrified as to what went on. Stowe did not have to say that slavery was wrong in words anyway.
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