Lexington Books
Pages: 484
Trim: 6¾ x 9⅜
978-0-7391-2798-8 • Hardback • March 2009 • $176.00 • (£137.00)
978-0-7391-2799-5 • Paperback • February 2009 • $74.99 • (£58.00)
978-0-7391-3354-5 • eBook • March 2009 • $71.00 • (£55.00)
W. B. Allen is emeritus professor of political science at Michigan State University and author of George Washington: America's First Progressive andThe Personal and the Political: Three Fables by Montesquieu. An Introduction to Political Philosophy.
Chapter 1 Preface
Part 2 Book I. The Ghostly Cry:Uncle Tom's Cabin
Part 3 Part I
Chapter 4 Chapter 1. The Question of Equality
Chapter 5 Chapter 2. The Real Alternatives
Chapter 6 Chapter 3. Standards of Humanity
Chapter 7 Chapter 4. Stowe's Own Introductions
Chapter 8 Chapter 5. A Little Wine and Brandy: The Narrative Begins
Chapter 9 Chapter 6. Patriarchy, Matriarchy, and other Myths of Slavery
Chapter 10 Chapter 7. The Birth of Uncle Tom
Chapter 11 Chapter 8. The Kinesis of Slavery and the Science of Natures
Chapter 12 Chapter 9. “What Country Have I?”
Chapter 13 Chapter 10. We Have No City
Chapter 14 Chapter 11. The Light of the Present
Chapter 15 Chapter 12. Myth Making and the End
Chapter 16 Chapter 13. An Unaccountable Prejudice
Chapter 17 Chapter 14. Triumph
Part 18 Part II
Chapter 19 Chapter 15. The Genealogy of Uncle Tom
Chapter 20 Chapter 16. Calvin's Ideas
Chapter 21 Chapter 17. The Central Problem: Slavery
Chapter 22 Chapter 18. The General Significance of Uncle Tom's Cabin
Part 23 Book II. Non-utopian Optimism: Harriet Stowe'sEvangelical Liberalism
Part 24 Part I
Chapter 25 Chapter 19. An American Campaign Abroad
Chapter 26 Chapter 20. A Cause Célèbre
Chapter 27 Chapter 21. Seasickness; or, The Way Things Really Look
Chapter 28 Chapter 22. The Scotland Campaign: A Beginning and End of Liberal History
Chapter 29 Chapter 23. The Practical Politics of the Matter
Chapter 30 Chapter 24. The Defense of Melodrama
Chapter 31 Chapter 25. Pre-utopian Reflections
Part 32 Part II
Chapter 33 Chapter 26. Anutopia
Chapter 34 Chapter 27. Coda–Was Harriet Stowe a Racist
Chapter 35 Chapter 28. Postscript
Uncle Tom's Cabin is an extraordinary work that helped remake our country and infuse considerations of humanity into our national character. Rethinking Uncle Tom is an extraordinary work of scholarship—the culmination of decades of research and thinking by W.B. Allen. It is more than the finest book ever written on that volume. It rediscovers Stowe's sophisticated political theory and gives Stowe her place as one of our country's finest political philosophers, who presented an integrated vision of liberty and equality over slavery. She helped lead our nation to realize the possibilities of a political existence that would bring us as close as humanly possible to perfection.
— Alfred L. Brophy, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
The author offers solid anaylsis of specific moments in Stowe's narrative. His scholarship is impressive: his depth of knowledge and his ability to sift through the text is admirable. One of the book's strengths is its attention to forgotten political arguments and theory of Stowe's day. Allen revives interest in Calvin Stowe, Harriet's husband, and shows how skillfully Harriet gave voice to her husband's philosophical, moral, and scholarly thought. In discussing their mutual support, Allen realigns them as virtually a collaborative team that both generated important political theory and communicated it to a vast readership. . . . Recommended.
— Choice Reviews, October 2009
William B. Allen's astute and provocative interpretation ofUncle Tom's Cabin is a tour de force in Stowe scholarship, demonstrating at once Allen's deft handling of political literature and Stowe's profound treatment of America's founding principles through literary politics.
— Colleen Sheehan, Villanova University