Blackwood's Edinburgh magazine, volume 456, no. 10, October 1853
by Various
- Language
- EN
- Format
- EPUB
Description
"Blackwood's Edinburgh magazine, volume 456, no. 10, October 1853" by Various is a literary periodical written in the mid-19th century. This issue gathers criticism, serialized fiction, travel writing, and cultural commentary, featuring pieces on Shakespeare, a Spanish travel sketch, a lecture on Swift, and an installment of Lady Lee’s Widowhood. Its lead article offers an extensive critical examination of Uncle Tom’s Cabin, framing the transatlantic debate over slavery, literature, and Christian ethics.
The opening of the magazine presents a long, vivid review of Uncle Tom’s Cabin that imagines how a reader in a future century might judge both the novel and America, then recounts the book’s explosive reception and weighs Harriet Beecher Stowe’s gifts for pathos, drama, humor, and moral earnestness alongside stylistic faults and Dickensian mannerisms. The critic interweaves analysis with a brisk tour of major episodes and characters—Tom, Eliza and George Harris, St. Clare, Eva, Miss Ophelia, Topsy, Cassy, Emmeline, Prue, and the villain Legree—quoting striking passages to illustrate Stowe’s emotional power and Christian reflections. Key scenes summarized include the bargaining with the slave-dealer Haley, Eliza’s flight, the steamboat mother’s suicide, the New Orleans household with Eva and Topsy, Eva’s death and St. Clare’s sudden end, and Tom’s sale into Legree’s brutality, all used to probe slavery’s cruelty and the limits of fiction to portray it. Throughout, the essay balances praise of Stowe’s “genius” with reservations about didactic interruptions, setting the tone for the rest of the issue’s literary and cultural criticism. (This is an automatically generated summary.)
The opening of the magazine presents a long, vivid review of Uncle Tom’s Cabin that imagines how a reader in a future century might judge both the novel and America, then recounts the book’s explosive reception and weighs Harriet Beecher Stowe’s gifts for pathos, drama, humor, and moral earnestness alongside stylistic faults and Dickensian mannerisms. The critic interweaves analysis with a brisk tour of major episodes and characters—Tom, Eliza and George Harris, St. Clare, Eva, Miss Ophelia, Topsy, Cassy, Emmeline, Prue, and the villain Legree—quoting striking passages to illustrate Stowe’s emotional power and Christian reflections. Key scenes summarized include the bargaining with the slave-dealer Haley, Eliza’s flight, the steamboat mother’s suicide, the New Orleans household with Eva and Topsy, Eva’s death and St. Clare’s sudden end, and Tom’s sale into Legree’s brutality, all used to probe slavery’s cruelty and the limits of fiction to portray it. Throughout, the essay balances praise of Stowe’s “genius” with reservations about didactic interruptions, setting the tone for the rest of the issue’s literary and cultural criticism. (This is an automatically generated summary.)
Summary
"Blackwood's Edinburgh magazine, volume 456, no. 10, October 1853" by Various is a literary periodical written in the mid-19th century. This issue gathers criticism, serialized fiction, travel writing, and cultural commentary, featuring pieces on Shakespeare, a Spanish travel sketch, a lecture on Swift, and an installment of Lady Lee’s Widowhood. Its lead article offers an extensive critical examination of Uncle Tom’s Cabin, framing the transatlantic debate over slavery, lite
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