Uncle Tom's Cabin Thesis

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The Fugitive Slave Act was a federal law that allowed the capture and return of slaves that escape within the country. The Fugitive Slave Act 1850 imposed harsher punishment for the people who prevent the capture of runaway slaves than the Fugitive Slave Act from 1793. This act gave the White people the command to forcibly assist in the seize of runaways’ slaves regardless of if they were Northern or Southern whites. Heavy punishments were enforced to citizen or federal marshals who refused to follow the law and to individuals who helped slaves to escape. Consequently, this new act negated legal processes established in the North by denying African Americans the right to a jury trial and by placing control of individual cases in duty of …show more content…
Uncle Tom was a term utilized as a defamatory term for a submissive black person, especially when the person is conscious of their class status by their race. This novel was written after the creation of the Fugitive Slave act to combat the influence of this act. Thanks to this novel many northerners realized how cruel slavery was and due to this the difference between South and North increased. I don’t think it is fair the way Uncle Tom is portrayed in the book; however, it was a real interpretation of how African Americans saw slavery and how they were desperate for a change. Like I mentioned before, this novel contributed to the start of the Civil War. This book changed the way many citizens saw slavery, they started to be more receptive towards antislavery views. Stowe influenced many people who were skeptics or didn’t support the abolitionist movement. However, Southerners didn’t react well to the book, they argued that the story was fake and false. They also argued that the book was exaggerated and didn’t represent how slavery was. I think that this book changed the history of the United States, it influenced so many people and contributed to the start of the Civil War by inspiring the anti-slavery abolitionists and by helping them to get courage and to fight for was it right. The Fugitive Slave Act made the anti-slavery community to increase and to fight for their freedom. This book describes