Do you have a dream? Do you think that the dream of acting as an action can change the present situation? Do you think you can change the world? Robin Williams said, "No matter what people talk, words and thoughts can change the world." This sentence explains in many ways that Harriet Beechest is wanting to use her novel 'Tom's Uncle's Cabin'. What to complete. According to Wilkaufman, "I helped lay the foundation for civil war." Stow is a proactive abolitionist, but her real career is a teacher of Connecticut. She was born and brought up.
Harari Tsuyoshi Uncle Tom's Hut Stow Harari Tomoseki Stow's Uncle Tom's analysis of the hut, definitely the most influential in American history novels. Stowe's sentimental writing style captures the imagination of the reader and Tom Uncle 's cabin is the standard for abolishing sports. One of the hero Tom Uncle spread Christianity and dies for faith like Christ. By making Tom's uncle the same as Jesus Christ, Harriet Beechest deliberately caused social change and abolition of the audience.
Hulite · Beecher Stow's Uncle Tom's hut Harriet · Beecher · Stow's ankle · Tom's hut may not be seen as a great literary work, and it has the essence of education, but now, in the past As it reflects the impact, it is always known as a great literary work. . Harriet Beecher Stow seems to be destined to write some of the great novels protesting as Uncle Tom's hut: her father, her brothers and sisters are missionaries and societies Laimanbiche, prominent evangelical missionaries There was a reformist. Stow was born in Litchfield, Connecticut in 1811. He moved to Cincinnati with his family and was only 21 years old.
In the early 1950's, Harry Beecher Stow wrote the Uncle Tom's cabin. During the 1830's Stow became an abolition faction during his stay in Cincinnati, Ohio. Cincinnati is the slave state of the Ohio River in northern Kentucky. Thousands of incredible slaves pass through Cincinnati as they freely move along the subway railroad. She also became a friend with several abolitionists in Ohio, including John Rankin, which was a subway stop in Ripley, Ohio. While living in Cincinnati, stories heard from the fugitive slaves and the subway railroad company were the foundation of her book "Uncle Tom's Cabin".