Error By Mrs. Stowe (October 1956 | Volume: 7, Issue: 6)

Error By Mrs. Stowe

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Authors: Bruce Catton

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October 1956 | Volume 7, Issue 6


The slave had nothing to lose but his chains, and even second-class citizenship is a vast improvement on outright bondage. But it is at the same time a denial of one of the basic parts of the infinite American dream, and its existence brings problems of its own. The Emancipation Proclamation did not, unfortunately, do anything to end the race problem; it simply committed the country to an unending search for a way to end it. And it is this problem, and its terrible connection with the peculiar institution itself, which engages the attention of Mr. J. C. Furnas in his new book, Goodbye to Uncle Tom .

Like Mr. Stampp, Mr. Furnas readily discerns the roots of this problem in the mythology that grew up about slavery itself. But it is his contention that a highly damaging part of this mythology was contributed by the abolitionists themselves, and his principal target is no one less than Harriet Beecher Stowe, who wrote Uncle Tom’s Cabin and who is practically the patron saint of the ancient antislavery cause.

His thesis is both simple and provocative. We still have not made too much headway in our attack on the race problem, he says, chiefly because we have, deeply imbedded in our minds, a species of intellectual block which keeps us from approaching the problem rationally. One probable cause of this block, he believes, lies in Mrs. Stowe’s famous book. For although Mrs. Stowe did all one individual could do to wage war on slavery, she accepted and made current (says Mr. Furnas) an idea that lies at the very heart of racism—the idea that the colored man is somehow a being unlike the white man; unlike him, innately inferior to him, cursed by an inscrutable Providence with a built-in, ineradicable inequality. She argued that, although undeniably inferior, the colored man was nevertheless a human being with an immortal soul and that it was eternally and terribly wrong for him to be owned by any other man; and as a means of marshaling sentiment against slavery itself, this was all to the good. But it is something less than a good position from which to approach the race problem itself, and it is the race problem that we are still stuck with. Once admit the “undeniably inferior” premise, and the problem becomes all but insoluble.

Goodbye to Uncle Tom , by J. C. Furnas. William Sloane Associates. 435 pp. $6.

Mrs. Stowe’s book unquestionably had something to do with bringing on the Civil War, which came when men finally abandoned the dim hope that slavery could in some way be got rid of by honest care and thought. But its effects reached beyond the war and help to color much present-day thinking. “Uncle Tom,” says Mr. Furnas, “would never have burned on and on had it not been compounded of the