About: Uncle Tom's Cabin   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/jqiagBYt7gleQRig0FoSXQ==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Uncle Tom's Cabin is the cabin housing site on Caravanserai Island on the Emerald Ocean. Image:Icon boarding house.pngArr! This article about a building in Puzzle Pirates be a stub. Ye can help YPPedia by [ expanding it].

AttributesValues
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rdfs:label
  • Uncle Tom's Cabin
rdfs:comment
  • Uncle Tom's Cabin is the cabin housing site on Caravanserai Island on the Emerald Ocean. Image:Icon boarding house.pngArr! This article about a building in Puzzle Pirates be a stub. Ye can help YPPedia by [ expanding it].
  • Written by Harriet Beecher Stowe shortly before the American Civil War, Uncle Tom's Cabin is famous for strengthening the cause of abolitionism in the United States. When he met Stowe, Abraham Lincoln commented, "So this is the little lady who started this great war." The book is also notable for a less significant reason: it is a prime example of what rampant, unchecked canon distortion can do to a continuum.
  • Uncle Tom's Cabin is mentioned in many other works of literature. Ironically, while Uncle Tom is a strong, admirable character who endures many hardships, the term "Uncle Tom" has come to mean someone who defers too much to authority, especially the whites in power.
  • Up-time copies of Uncle Tom's Cabin (including Russian translations) and other such anti-slavery works were smuggled to Tsarist Russia and spread among the serfs.
  • Wildly popular in the Northern United States before the War of Secession, Uncle Tom's Cabin was met with outrage throughout the South. After the war, when the Confederate States were established, the book was banned throughout that country long before the Freedom Party set up an authoritarian regime under President Jake Featherston, even after President James Longstreet manumitted the slaves. Illicit copies of the book circulated among educated blacks in the CS.
  • The book, which has won both the Rimpoche and Nobel Prizes, was first published in 1981 as a series of humorous short stories. Although the short stories gained some popularity in Asia, they were not commonly known outside of the Turquoise District. Ten years later, in 1991, translator and archivist Marcus B. Schmibby discovered Sto's stories, gathered them into an anthology, and translated them from Sino-Tibetan into Proto-Germanic, English, and Flemish, the standard languages of world literature. From that point on Uncle Tom's Cabin enjoyed huge popularity worldwide as it raised awareness and controversy over the underlying issue of panda enslavement.
  • Uncle Tom's Cabin; or, Life Among the Lowly is an anti-slavery novel by American author Harriet Beecher Stowe. Published in 1852, the novel had a profound effect on attitudes toward African Americans and slavery in the United States, so much so in the latter case that the novel intensified the sectional conflict leading to the American Civil War.
  • Uncle Tom's Cabin is a book depicting life in the South during the good ol' days before the Civil War. It is famous for its total lack of truthiness regarding slavery; it dared to suggest that slaves were not happy on the plantation — tell that to Aunt Jemima, lady — and so affronted the South's honor that it was forced to declare war. Uncle Tom's Cabin is thus solely responsible for killing millions of people. Besides being a book and neither written nor edited by Dr. Colbert, the main problems with Uncle Tom's Cabin include:
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Date
  • May 2007
Release Date
  • 1852-03-20(xsd:date)
ocean
  • Emerald
Country
Name
  • Uncle Tom's Cabin
arch
  • Ibis
Genre
Type
  • cabin
media type
  • Print
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  • 203(xsd:integer)
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Language
Author
Image caption
  • Uncle Tom's Cabin, Boston edition
Island
  • Caravanserai Island
Illustrator
Screenshot
  • yes
Publisher
Owner
erected
  • yes
ISBN
  • none
Size
  • regular
abstract
  • Uncle Tom's Cabin is the cabin housing site on Caravanserai Island on the Emerald Ocean. Image:Icon boarding house.pngArr! This article about a building in Puzzle Pirates be a stub. Ye can help YPPedia by [ expanding it].
  • Written by Harriet Beecher Stowe shortly before the American Civil War, Uncle Tom's Cabin is famous for strengthening the cause of abolitionism in the United States. When he met Stowe, Abraham Lincoln commented, "So this is the little lady who started this great war." The book is also notable for a less significant reason: it is a prime example of what rampant, unchecked canon distortion can do to a continuum.
  • Uncle Tom's Cabin is mentioned in many other works of literature. Ironically, while Uncle Tom is a strong, admirable character who endures many hardships, the term "Uncle Tom" has come to mean someone who defers too much to authority, especially the whites in power.
  • Up-time copies of Uncle Tom's Cabin (including Russian translations) and other such anti-slavery works were smuggled to Tsarist Russia and spread among the serfs.
  • Uncle Tom's Cabin is a book depicting life in the South during the good ol' days before the Civil War. It is famous for its total lack of truthiness regarding slavery; it dared to suggest that slaves were not happy on the plantation — tell that to Aunt Jemima, lady — and so affronted the South's honor that it was forced to declare war. Uncle Tom's Cabin is thus solely responsible for killing millions of people. Besides being a book and neither written nor edited by Dr. Colbert, the main problems with Uncle Tom's Cabin include: * Anti-capitalism: It is clearly against trading macacas on Wall Street and foreign trade with Africa. * Pro-union: It actually supports giving "slaves" rights beyond food and shelter, even allowing them to vote. * Pro-combatant: The "slaves" would also gain legal rights against those who had given them all the chitlins and watermelon they could eat.
  • Uncle Tom's Cabin; or, Life Among the Lowly is an anti-slavery novel by American author Harriet Beecher Stowe. Published in 1852, the novel had a profound effect on attitudes toward African Americans and slavery in the United States, so much so in the latter case that the novel intensified the sectional conflict leading to the American Civil War. Stowe, a Connecticut-born teacher at the Hartford Female Academy and an active abolitionist, focused the novel on the character of Uncle Tom, a long-suffering Black slave around whom the stories of other characters — both fellow slaves and slave owners — revolve. The sentimental novel depicts the cruel reality of slavery while also asserting that Christian love can overcome something as destructive as enslavement of fellow human beings. Uncle Tom's Cabin was the best-selling novel of the 19th century (and the second best-selling book of that century, following the Bible) and is credited with helping fuel the abolitionist cause in the 1850s. In the first year after it was published, 300,000 copies of the book were sold in the United States alone. The book's impact was so great that when Abraham Lincoln met Stowe at the start of the American Civil War, Lincoln is often quoted as having declared, "So this is the little lady who made this big war." The book, and even more the plays it inspired, also helped create a number of stereotypes about Blacks, many of which endure to this day. These include the affectionate, dark-skinned mammy; the Pickaninny stereotype of black children; and the Uncle Tom, or dutiful, long-suffering servant faithful to his white master or mistress. In recent years, the negative associations with Uncle Tom's Cabin have, to an extent, overshadowed the historical impact of the book as a "vital antislavery tool."
  • Wildly popular in the Northern United States before the War of Secession, Uncle Tom's Cabin was met with outrage throughout the South. After the war, when the Confederate States were established, the book was banned throughout that country long before the Freedom Party set up an authoritarian regime under President Jake Featherston, even after President James Longstreet manumitted the slaves. Illicit copies of the book circulated among educated blacks in the CS.
  • The book, which has won both the Rimpoche and Nobel Prizes, was first published in 1981 as a series of humorous short stories. Although the short stories gained some popularity in Asia, they were not commonly known outside of the Turquoise District. Ten years later, in 1991, translator and archivist Marcus B. Schmibby discovered Sto's stories, gathered them into an anthology, and translated them from Sino-Tibetan into Proto-Germanic, English, and Flemish, the standard languages of world literature. From that point on Uncle Tom's Cabin enjoyed huge popularity worldwide as it raised awareness and controversy over the underlying issue of panda enslavement.
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