翻訳と辞書
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・ Unconditionally
・ Unconditionally Guaranteed
・ Unconference
・ Unconfirmed Reports
・ Unconformity
・ Unconquerable Nation
・ Unconquered
・ Uncle Simon
・ Uncle Slam
・ Uncle Styopa
・ Uncle Target
・ Uncle Ted
・ Uncle Teddy (Bob's Burgers)
・ Uncle Tobys
・ Uncle Tobys Super Series
Uncle Tom
・ Uncle Tom Cobley
・ Uncle Tom syndrome
・ Uncle Tom's Bungalow
・ Uncle Tom's Cabaña
・ Uncle Tom's Cabin
・ Uncle Tom's Cabin (1910 Thanhouser film)
・ Uncle Tom's Cabin (1918 film)
・ Uncle Tom's Cabin (1927 film)
・ Uncle Tom's Cabin (1965 film)
・ Uncle Tom's Cabin (disambiguation)
・ Uncle Tom's Cabin (song)
・ Uncle Tom's Cabin Historic Site
・ Uncle Tom's Children
・ Uncle Tom's Fairy Tales


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Uncle Tom : ウィキペディア英語版
Uncle Tom

Uncle Tom is the title character of Harriet Beecher Stowe's 1852 novel, ''Uncle Tom's Cabin''.
The phrase "Uncle Tom" has also become an epithet for a person who is slavish and excessively subservient to perceived authority figures, particularly a black person who behaves in a subservient manner to white people; or any person perceived to be complicit in the oppression of their own group.〔("Uncle Tom" ). Wordnet.princeton.edu. Retrieved April 24, 2009.〕〔http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/uncle+tom〕 The negative epithet is the result of later works derived from the original novel.
==Original characterization and critical evaluations==
At the time of the novel's initial publication in 1851 Uncle Tom was a rejection of the existing stereotypes of minstrel shows; Stowe's melodramatic story humanized the suffering of slavery for White audiences by portraying Tom as a Christlike figure who is ultimately martyred, beaten to death by a cruel master because Tom refuses to betray the whereabouts of two women who had escaped from slavery.〔 Stowe reversed the gender conventions of slave narratives by juxtaposing Uncle Tom's passivity against the daring of three African American women who escape from slavery.〔
The novel was both influential and commercially successful, published as a serial from 1851 to 1852 and as a book from 1852 onward.〔〔 An estimated 500,000 copies had sold worldwide by 1853, including unauthorized reprints. Senator Charles Sumner credited ''Uncle Tom's Cabin'' for the election of Abraham Lincoln and Lincoln himself reportedly quipped that Stowe had triggered the American Civil War.〔 Frederick Douglass praised the novel as "a flash to light a million camp fires in front of the embattled hosts of slavery".〔 Despite Douglass's enthusiasm, an anonymous 1852 reviewer for William Lloyd Garrison's publication ''The Liberator'' suspected a racial double standard in the idealization of Uncle Tom:
Uncle Tom's character is sketched with great power and rare religious perception. It triumphantly exemplifies the nature, tendency, and results of Christian non-resistance. We are curious to know whether Mrs. Stowe is a believer in the duty of non-resistance for the White man, under all possible outrage and peril, as for the Black man… (whites in parallel circumstances, it is often said ) Talk not of overcoming evil with good—it is madness! Talk not of peacefully submitting to chains and stripes—it is base servility! Talk not of servants being obedient to their masters—let the blood of tyrants flow! How is this to be explained or reconciled? Is there one law of submission and non-resistance for the Black man, and another of rebellion and conflict for the white man? When it is the whites who are trodden in the dust, does Christ justify them in taking up arms to vindicate their rights? And when it is the blacks who are thus treated, does Christ require them to be patient, harmless, long-suffering, and forgiving? Are there two Christs?

James Weldon Johnson, a prominent figure of the Harlem Renaissance, expresses an antipathetic opinion in his autobiography:
For my part, I was never an admirer of Uncle Tom, nor of his type of goodness; but I believe that there were lots of old Negroes as foolishly good as he; the proof of which is that they knowingly stayed and worked on the plantations that furnished sinews for the army which was fighting to keep them enslaved.

In 1949, American writer James Baldwin rejected the emasculation of the title character "robbed of his humanity and divested of his sex" as the price of spiritual salvation for a dark-skinned man in a fiction whose African-American characters, in Baldwin's view, were invariably two dimensional stereotypes.〔 To Baldwin, Stowe was closer to a pamphleteer than a novelist and her artistic vision was fatally marred by polemics and racism that manifested especially in her handling of the title character.〔 Stowe had stated that her sons had wept when she first read them the scene of Uncle Tom's death, but after Baldwin's essay it ceased being respectable to accept the melodrama of the Uncle Tom story.〔 Uncle Tom became what critic Linda Williams describes as "an epithet of servility" and the novel's reputation plummeted until feminist critics led by Jane Tompkins reassessed the tale's female characters.〔 According to Debra J. Rosenthal in an introduction to a collection of critical appraisals for the ''Routledge Literary Sourcebook on Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin'', overall reactions have been mixed with some critics praising the novel for affirming the humanity of the African American characters and for the risks Stowe assumed in taking a very public stand against slavery before abolitionism had become a socially acceptable cause, and others criticizing the very limited terms upon which those characters' humanity was affirmed and the artistic shortcomings of political melodrama.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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