Harriet Beecher Stowe’s novel “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” is a very
significant piece of American Literature. However, there are always critics out
there that dig under the surface of a story to really look at what is happening
and how the author expresses the novel. Sophia Cantave digs into Stowe’s novel
in her critical essay “Who Gets to Create the Lasting Images? The Problem of
Black Representation in Uncle Tom’s Cabin.”
In Cantave’s
essay she focuses on how black people are presented in Stowe’s novel and how
that effects how the novel is interpreted in modern day context. Harriet Beecher Stowe was a white woman
living in the Midwest during the time of slavery. Her family was well-off and
was highly religious. One argument that Cantave repeated brings up is how can
someone like Stowe, a white, middle class, woman, write about the harshness and
cruelty of slavery? How can that be an accurate interpretation? Cantave points
out that Uncle Tom’s Cabin was
written the way it was so the topic could be readable. Josephine Donovan adds
that Stowe once said that “the book is a very inadequate representation of
slavery [because] slavery, in some of its workings, is too dreadful for the
purposes of art. A work which should represent it strictly as it is would be a
work which could not be read; all works which ever mean to give pleasure must
draw a veil somewhere, or they cannot succeed,” (585). Slavery is a very harsh
subject. No one can adequately portray the cruel nature of slavery on a piece
of paper. And if you could, who would read it? Who would want to? To write
about slavery one needs to mix pain and pleasure; include both sides of any
spectrum. “By mixing the tragic and the laughable, Uncle Tom’s Cabin gives white people and black people a way to read
slavery together,” (585). To discuss such horrible events in time you almost
have to joke about it. People do it for all different types of horrific events.
People need comic relief moments. Cantave, who agrees with Stowe making slavery
readable, also thinks that these comic moments reinforce black subordination.
It also takes away from the actual slave experience. All of this as done so “the
nation as a whole felt more comfortable reading [about slavery],” (585). But at
what cost?
Cantave
narrows in on this representation of black people and how it has been used in
modern times. She begins to question how useful this book is today and whether
or not it should be used in classes or not. Pairing slavery and black people
with comic moments has had repercussions on our society. “Stowe inadvertently
provided a way for white people, when threatened or challenged, to regulate black
achievement, black national mobility, and black cultural expression,” (586).
Black culture is always being defined by slavery. When tragic events are paired
with comic events it takes away from the actual tragedy. It allows the tragedy
to be overlooked or not taken as seriously. It’s an outlet for white people who
can’t read about what actually happened in the South.
Cantave also
discusses what Black people thought about the characters in Uncle Tom’s Cabin. A general consensus
was that Tom was unrealistic. In reality someone in Tom’s position wouldn’t
speak out against their masters. Others thought that Stowe did a remarkable job
is shedding “light upon the horrible and inhuman agency of slavery,” (589).
Another former slave said that Stowe “didn’t know what slavery was so left out
the worst of it” (589). Black people were either in favor of Stowe’s work or
not. It’s still debated among white and black people whether or not Stowe’s
representation was accurate or not. Regardless of the debate Stowe’s novel was
very powerful for the time period. The main question is what effect does it
have today?
As Americans
I personally feel like Black history and slavery is told by White people. If we
just look at Uncle Tom’s Cabin, it
was written by a white woman. I understand that she wrote it the way she did
because slavery is impossible to describe down to each gruesome detail. And
what white person would buy a book about slavery written by a black person (in
that time)? To get Stowe’s point across and to the audience that could do
something about it she needed to write the novel so white people would read it
and interpret it the way she hoped for; to see that slavery should be stopped
and that black lives matter. But I do agree with Cantave. What does this
sugar-coated representation of slavery do for us today? We can’t keep giving
ourselves comic relief moments because we are either too ashamed of our
ancestors or because we can’t stomach the truth of what slavery was actually
like. We can’t keep turning to white authors to interpret black lives. When
studying slavery we shouldn’t look at how it affected white peoples’ lives or
how it changed American life. Slavery is about African Americans and what they
went through, not what Americans went through while watching the harsh ways of
slavery. I think that Stowe did a remarkable job depicting slavery in a way
that made white people empathize with slaves and showed slaves as strong,
determined, individuals. She accomplished what she set out to do. But as we
look onto the novel today it should be with a more observant eye. We can’t just
look at the surface, there’s more to uncover about slavery. The words just
haven’t come out yet.
This is part of the reason that we're reading Beloved later in the semester--how does an African American woman write about slavery? Stay tuned:)
ReplyDeleteThis is part of the reason that we're reading Beloved later in the semester--how does an African American woman write about slavery? Stay tuned:)
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