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"Anti-Tom" or Plantation Literature

The two most famous anti-Tom books are The Sword and the Distaff by William Gilmore Simms and The Planter's Northern Bride by Caroline Lee Hentz.

Simms' The Sword and the Distaff came out only a few months after Stowe's novel and contains a number of sections and discussions that clearly debate Stowe's book and view of slavery. The novel focuses on the Revolutionary War and its aftermath through the lives of Captain Porgy and one of his slaves. Simms novel was popular enough that it was reprinted in 1854 under the title Woodcraft.

The Planter's Northern Bride by Caroline Lee Hentz was published two years after Uncle Tom's Cabin. Hentz's novel offers a defense of slavery as seen through the eyes of a northern woman — the daughter of an abolitionist, no less — who marries a southern slave owner. As with other books in the genre, Hentz's novel tries to show that black people lacked the ability to function well without oversight by whites. Her novel also focused on the fear of a slave rebellion, especially if abolitionists didn't stop stirring up trouble.

Simms and Hentz's books were two of between twenty or thirty pro-slavery novels written in the decade after Uncle Tom's Cabin. Other well-known authors who published anti-Tom novels include John Pendleton Kennedy.

Mary Henderson Eastman's Aunt Phillis's Cabin was one of the bestselling novels of the genre. Published in 1852, it sold 20,000 to 30,000 copies. In a note in the book, Eastman proudly stated she was a descendant of the First Families of Virginia.

Little Eva: The Flower of the South, by Philip J. Cozans, was a rare example of anti-Tom literature, in the sense that - whereas most anti-Tom novels were written for an adult audience - Little Eva was in fact an anti-Tom children's novel.
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quoted from wiki with book links added.

Not surprisingly, Cozans seems to have taken his title from one of the characters in Uncle Tom's Cabin, Eva St. Clare, also known as "Little Eva," while Eastman plays on the title of the famous novel. It also seems that Hentz took her idea from one of Stowe's character, Ophelia St. Clare, a Vermont Quaker, who travels South to help her nephew at his Louisiana plantation.

Comments

  1. I used a textbook -- maybe the Heath Anthology -- a few years back in an American Lit survey that had selections from "The Planter's Northern Bride." It was no worse or better than a lot of the minor works the editors had included.

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  2. It doesn't seem that John Pendleton Kennedy really fits into the "Anti-Tom" classification. Most of his books were written before Uncle Tom's Cabin came out. He is probably most famous for introducing Edgar Allen Poe to the Southern Literary Messenger and making friends with other literary greats like Thackeray while in Europe. He was quite active politically as a Southern Whig (Maryland) and a Unionist, although he had apparently defended slavery and had some measure of sympathy for South Carolina's revolt in writing his pamphlet on The Border States in 1861, outlining his position on the matter. He was even considered as a possible Republican VP in 1860. Here's more on Kennedy,

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_P._Kennedy

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