Whitewashing Uncle Tom's cabin

nineteenth-century women novelists respond to Stowe

48 min read
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204 pages 2005

About This Book

"Joy Jordan-Lake examines the ways in which antebellum women novelists tried to counter Harriet Beecher Stowe's enormously popular Uncle Tom's Cabin by preaching a 'theology of whiteness' from within the pages of the books - but were ultimately undermined by their own proslavery agendas. Including a discussion of twentieth- and twenty-first-century novels that revisit plantation mythology, Whitewashing Uncle Tom's Cabin casts new light on the ethical and moral disaster of securing one group's economic strength at the expense of other groups' access to dignity, compassion, and justice." -- Publisher's description.

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