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Uncle Tom's Cabin Essay

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Eva is by being a good Christian you are cable of overseeing the color of a person. Eva loves everyone in the novel, no matter the race. When she hears of the horrors of slavery she becomes disturbed and depressed. The friendship between Uncle Tom and Eva is an important one; Tom essentially worships the little girl and goes out of his way to protect her. The dynamics of their friendship seems to be used in the book for the readers to interpret both Tom and Eva as children of god, they are both always seen in the novel as innocent, and preaching the word of the bible to others. In the novel, little Eva’s main function to continue the plot is for her to die. Death in the story seems to symbolize heroism. Right before Eva is about to pass, …show more content…

Stowe uses many different types of devices to get across the meaning of evils in slavery, Christianity being the main one. In the article Up to Heaven's Gate, Down in Earth's Dust: The Politics of Judgment in Uncle Tom's Cabin written by Joshua D. Bellin, he gives an in depth explanation of its attack on slavery, and how Uncle Tom’s Cabin intertwines the struggles of humans trying to and oppose slavery but also trying to comprehend a person’s role in the eye’s of God. He goes on to explain that for one to fully understand the novel and its powerful influence on others one must “perceive its sensitivity to and manipulation of the religious rhetoric which surrounded the slavery issue.” (Bellin, 1993) The article continues by asking what the appropriate Christian response to slavery was, explaining that Uncle Tom’s Cabin is a religious debate in itself. Should a good Christian take the responsibility of the individual soul or to the institutions of the religion itself, and should the good Christian commit to pacifism or take action in the debate of slavery. Bellin uses Uncle Tom and George Harris as an example, He himself writes, “one sees the essential distinction which Stowe was to embody in Uncle Tom and George Harris: while the former submits to earthly law, trusting in God to work his salvation and the salvation of his fellows,… believing that it is his God-ordained right to resist the

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