One of the
most interesting aspects of Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin is the portrayal and significance of women in a
primarily white male debate over the issue of slavery. Through Stowe’s
depiction of several strong-willed white women as saviors and protectors of African
American slaves, the author implies that women are capable of challenging men’s
political stance toward slavery and can play a significant role in dismantling the
institution of slavery or at least preventing the passage of stricter fugitive
laws.
Stowe
suggests that one of the reasons women oppose slavery and help slaves gain
freedom is because they recognize that the role of mothers to protect their
children and keep their families united is universal and transcends race. White
women can relate to slaves (particularly enslaved mothers) and are horrified by
what they frequently express in the novel as the cruelest aspect of slavery:
the dissolution of families and particularly the separation of mother and
child.
One part of
the novel in which Stowe clearly comments on women’s influence occurs in
Chapter IX when Mrs. Bird challenges her husband’s political stance and makes
him reevaluate the consequences of his political role. Mr. Bird first tries to
defend his support of stricter fugitive laws by suggesting that politics and
personal opinion are inherently separate and that strong public support for
slavery overshadows sympathy toward slaves and the brutal conditions they face.
Mrs. Bird, initially described as a “timid, blushing little woman” boldly
challenges her husband and makes him aware of his own hypocrisy by telling him,
“There’s a way you political folks have of coming round and round a plain right
thing and you don’t believe in it [slavery] yourselves, when it comes to
practice” (829, 830). Eliza quickly forms a strong emotional bond with Mrs.
Bird upon discovering that they have both experienced the loss of a child.
Despite Mrs. Bird’s mourning over her son’s recent death, she makes a great
sacrifice by giving his clothes—her last remaining memories of her son—to
Harry. She tells her sons, “I could not find it in my heart to give them away
to any common person—to anybody that was happy; but I give them to a mother
more heart-broken and sorrowful than I am; and I hope God will send his
blessings with them!” (835). In this statement, Mrs. Bird acknowledges Eliza as
a person rather than by her status as an African American slave. She
prioritizes Eliza and Harry’s safety and wellbeing over her own happiness to
prevent Eliza from suffering a great tragedy—the separation from her last remaining
child. Stowe’s attempt to connect with a female audience becomes clear in this
chapter when the narrator interjects, “mother that reads this, has there never
been in your house a drawer, or a closet, the opening of which has been to you
like the opening again of a little grave…happy mother that you are, if it has
not been so!” (835). The technique Stowe employs here—the narrator’s direct
address to specific reader demographic (i.e. mothers)—is used throughout the
novel to suggest a connection between characters within in the novel and the
novel’s contemporary audience. Mrs. Bird’s sympathy for Eliza and Harry and her
ability to evoke an emotional response in her husband ultimately convinces Mr.
Bird to risk his reputation and defy his political opinion to ensure their
protection and freedom.
This
chapter is only one example in the novel of a woman’s ability to relate to and
protect slave families. The potential for women to act as saviors is also
presented in the debate that occurs between several women on pg. 844 and in Eva’s
charity toward and love and care for her father’s slaves.
What's also interesting about women's roles in Uncle Tom's Cabin is how many of them seem to come directly from Stowe's personal experiences. The part you mentioned about losing a child, for instance, was something that Stowe also experienced. I think this both helps and hurts her case; on the one hand, it adds yet another true perspective to the story, in addition to the stories of slaves that she gathered. On the other hand, the viewpoint of a white mother is a relatively specific one, and I wonder if that affected the novel's reception.
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