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  • - [Voiceover] Hey, Becca.

  • - [Voiceover] Hi, Kim.

  • - [Voiceover] Alright, so we're here to talk about

  • Uncle Tom's Cabin, and I think this is

  • such an interesting book because when Abraham Lincoln

  • met Harriet Beecher Stowe, he said to her,

  • "So you're the little lady that started this great war."

  • He said Uncle Tom's Cabin actually started the Civil War.

  • So how does a book start a war?

  • - [Voiceover] I think that's a really good question, Kim,

  • and these next two videos are gonna help us

  • understand a little bit more why Lincoln said that.

  • How does a little book start a war?

  • So this book was written by Harriet Beecher Stowe,

  • here she is, Stowe,

  • and Harriet Beecher Stowe was born

  • in Litchfield, Connecticut to this kind of

  • great abolitionist family.

  • So what's abolitionism, Kim?

  • - [Voiceover] Well abolitionism was the belief

  • in mostly in the early 19th century

  • that slavery should be ended immediately.

  • So there were varieties of beliefs

  • about the institution of slavery in early America.

  • Some people obviously were very pro-slavery

  • believe that it was a natural institution

  • sanctioned by the Bible.

  • Some people, like Abraham Lincoln,

  • at least early in his political career,

  • just wanted slavery to stay where it was,

  • and those were what we would call free-soilers,

  • or anti-slavery advocates.

  • They said, "Alright, we can't get rid of slavery

  • "in the South.

  • "It's too entrenched there as an institution,

  • "but we can make sure that it does not spread

  • "to any of the Western territories

  • "that we might settle in the future."

  • But abolitionists were these strongest opponents of slavery.

  • They said that slavery should be ended today

  • everywhere in the United States and the world,

  • and that it is an immoral, un-Christian institution.

  • So these Western territories were a really big part

  • of the increasing tension over the institution

  • of slavery in the 1850s.

  • So in 1848, the United States won

  • the Mexican-American War and they got a whole bunch

  • of new territory that had once been Mexico,

  • and these will become the states of Texas,

  • and Oklahoma, and many of the sort of

  • Midwestern states we have today,

  • but this now threatened the balance of power

  • between those slave-holding states in US Congress

  • and those that were free states,

  • so now everyone is wondering is slavery

  • going to spread to the West?

  • Should slavery spread to the West?

  • - [Voiceover] And this kind of anxiety about

  • the Western expansion of slavery was more tense

  • and became more sectionally divided

  • after the Compromise of 1850.

  • So the Compromise of 1850 happened right here in 1850,

  • (laughter)

  • and the Compromise of 1850, I like to think of it

  • kind of like a band-aid over this sectional tension,

  • so I'll draw you guys a little band-aid.

  • - [Voiceover] This is like a gaping wound, right,

  • and the Compromise of 1850 is just like

  • this tiny, little band-aid that's kind of

  • holding this dam together to mix my metaphors.

  • - [Voiceover] The Compromise of 1850

  • actually admitted California as a free state,

  • which was a really big win for the North, obviously.

  • - [Voiceover] Right, lots of gold.

  • - [Voiceover] But it also had a really strong

  • Fugitive Slave Act, so this was a really

  • kind of critical part of the Compromise of 1850,

  • and this was a big win for the South.

  • So why was it a big win?

  • - [Voiceover] Well the Fugitive Slave Act

  • said that if a marshal was in your town

  • requesting your help in rounding up an escaped slave,

  • you had to help that marshal or face charges yourself.

  • So this meant that any time that someone

  • who was enslaved in the South made a run for the North,

  • a run for Canada as many of the enslaved people did,

  • anyone in the North might be drafted

  • to help return that person to the South.

  • - [Voiceover] And if they didn't,

  • they were oftentimes fined, and this really made

  • all Northerners participatory in slavery,

  • even if they weren't slaveholders themselves

  • or living on a plantation in the South,

  • Northerners were participating in the way

  • that slavery was held together by disallowing

  • runaway slaves from continuing their lives

  • in free territories.

  • - [Voiceover] So you could imagine how

  • this might really galvanize a Northern audience

  • into action about slavery because before,

  • you might think, "Well, I don't like slavery,

  • "but what does it have to do with me, right?

  • "I'm just a grain miller living in Pennsylvania.

  • "None of my business.

  • "I don't like it, but I can't do anything about it,

  • "and it's not my fault."

  • Now all of a sudden, if an escaped slave

  • comes past your house and a marshal follows him or her,

  • now you've got to be a person to round that person up,

  • and so that means you have to participate

  • in slavery directly, and so you might find

  • yourself thinking, "You know what, I refuse to do that,

  • "and that means that I really do hate slavery."

  • - [Voiceover] And this was definitely the sentiment

  • that Stowe and her family had on the Underground Railroad.

  • So Stowe lived on a stop in the Underground Railroad,

  • and that was this passageway for Southern slaves

  • to get to the North, and Stowe and her husband

  • actually helped a lot of runaway slaves.

  • - [Voiceover] So the Underground Railroad

  • wasn't like a literal railroad, right?

  • I mean that would be pretty sweet

  • if there were a railroad that went under the ground

  • all the way up to Canada, but it was more like

  • a sort of an informal network of people

  • who might help escaped slaves, direct them

  • to food and shelter, and just kind of send them

  • along to the next waypost on their trip,

  • either to the North or to Canada.

  • - [Voiceover] And so when the Fugitive Slave Act

  • was passed with the Compromise of 1850,

  • the band-aid, this really upset Harriet Beecher Stowe

  • and really was one of the main catalysts

  • for her writing this book.

  • She also witnessed a slave auction,

  • and this Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote about

  • as just this terrible kind of scene

  • of a family being just torn apart,

  • and this was a really common practice within slavery,

  • that the unit of the family was not respected

  • as slaveholders wanted to sell their slaves

  • to different plantations throughout the South,

  • and the slave auction really became the basis

  • for the plot of Uncle Tom's Cabin.

  • - [Voiceover] Slave auctions were absolutely terrible.

  • In fact, not long before the Civil War,

  • the main slave auction site in Washington, D.C.

  • was just around the corner from the White House,

  • so imagine walking down the thoroughfare

  • of this great democracy, seeing the president's house,

  • the seat of government, and then turning a corner

  • and seeing people being sold off the block.

  • You know Abraham Lincoln saw a slave auction

  • in New Orleans and he said it was one of the things

  • that most influenced him to hate slavery,

  • just witnessing these families being torn apart.

  • And imagine either watching a mother being sold

  • away from her infant children, or being that mother

  • wondering what it would be like

  • if you're ever going to see them again.

  • - [Voiceover] I think that's a really important point

  • just to show that this was something

  • that was happening all around the United States

  • and this was just abolitionist fervor was bubbling up,

  • and then in 1852, when this book was published,

  • it really set into motion this new wave

  • of political rhetoric, and other novels,

  • and just a lot of talk about these fundamental

  • contradictions between Christianity and human bondage.

  • - [Voiceover] And we'll get to that in the next video.

- [Voiceover] Hey, Becca.

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B1 中級 美國腔

湯姆叔叔的小屋1 (Uncle Tom's Cabin 1)

  • 27 6
    Amy.Lin 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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