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  1. 1/3 Of Uncle Tom'S Cabin Synthesis

    1/3 of uncle tom's cabin synthesis. Human cruelty Human cruelty was constantly
    present during the antebellum period. It is a vital ...

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1/3 Of Uncle Tom'S Cabin Synthesis

Submitted by ballaprodigy on January 18, 2006

Category: Book Reports
Words: 916 | Pages: 4
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Human cruelty

Human cruelty was constantly present during the antebellum period. It is a vital part of America’s culture and it must be reiterated to new generations. In the novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin, Harriet Beecher Stowe recaps human cruelty through portraying the alteration in Mr. Shelby, affects the readers’ emotions by displaying views from various characters and demonstrates continuous separation of families during the antebellum period.
Mr. Shelby’s dynamic character is constantly modified in the first third of the book. In the beginning of the novel he is depicted as a protagonist due to the absence of the real protagonist, Uncle Tom, whose character is introduced in the later stages of the novel. Stowe illustrates him as a noble man by stating, “Mr. Shelby had the appearance of a gentleman” (2). This is one of the first lines in the novel and it abets the reader to envision him as fine, respectable person. Establishing him as a positive person at the start of the novel is vital for the plot of the story, (as) because later on in the book Stowe displays the dramatic negative changes in Mr. Shelby that come to him (due to his involvement in a slave trade) because he is involved in a slave trade. The author also establishes Mr. Haley as the antagonist at the commencement of the novel by introducing Haley’s foul dialect. Mr. Haley frequently says “nigger” (2) and mispronounces words as “valeyable” (2). Stowe utilizes this technique for the purpose of contrasting Mr. Haley to Mr. Shelby and further confirming that Mr. Shelby is a positive character. As the novel develops Mr. Shelby transforms into a shameless person. After a lengthy conversation with his wife he states, “I have agreed to sell Tom and Harry both; and I don’t know why I am to be rated as if I were a monster for doing what everyone does every day” (41). This statement portrays Shelby’s bemused state of mind. He is no longer the noble man he...

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