Uncle Tom's Cabin - The Slave Trade

Essay specific features

 

Issue:

Miscellaneous

 

Written by:

Deborah T

 

Date added:

November 12, 2012

 

Level:

University

 

Grade:

A

 

No of pages / words:

10 / 2791

 

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5100 times

 

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Essay content:

To have her readers empathize more with the slaves, Beecher put the worst stories in and the cruelest practices of the slave trade depicted by run away slaves. Although most of Uncle Tom's Cabin is very close to the reality of slavery, many aspects of the slave trade were portrayed inaccurately. One of the first miscalculated aspects of the slave trade is the reason for southern states involvement in the interstate slave trade...
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Stowe depicted Kentucky's involvement in the slave trade due to the poor soil of the region and economic ties with the practice. She implied in the beginning half of the Novel that many Kentuckians resorted to being bondmen in the slave trade due to the infertile land of the Bluegrass Region. In Stowe's Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin, (a book designed to muffle the critics of Uncle Tom's Cabin) she stated that "Slavery's subsequent lack of economic viability? [and] prevailing agricultural impoverishment are to blame for Kentucky's involvement in the notorious traffic?" (Stowe 254)...
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