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Uncle Tom's Cabin is a novel by Harriet Beecher Stowe which has slavery as one of its main themes. Stowe had written the novel as an angry response to the 1850 passage of the Fugitive Slave Act, which punished those who aided runaway slaves and diminished the rights of fugitive as well as freed slaves. Many writers have credited this novel with doing much to inflame the passions of Northerners to work for the abolition of slavery, although other writers dispute the novel's influence. Uncle Tom's Cabin was first published on March 20, 1852. Before the novel was written, the story was an anti-slavery serial called Uncle Tom's Cabin or, Life Among the Lowly. It ran for eleven-months starting on June 5, 1851 in the National Era abolitionist newspaper. Stowe lived in Cincinnati, Ohio, and:
Famous characters:
The term Uncle Tom, an offensive slur directed at African-Americans considered to be humiliatingly subservient to white people, is derived from this novel. Uncle Tom's Cabin has been made into several movies. Related articles
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