A Bibliography for Harriet Beecher Stowe
Primary Sources:
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Stowe, Harriet Beecher. Agnes of Sorrento. 1862. New York: AMS Press,
1971.
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_____. Awakening of the Twentieth Century Woman: Inspirational Writings
of Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe. [S]: s.n., 1917. [Note: Privately printed
edition limited to fifty copies ]
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_____. Betty's Bright Idea. Also, Deacon Pitkin's Farm, and The First
Christmas of New England. 1876. Freeport: Books for Libraries P, 1972.
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_____. The Chimney-corner. 1865. Plainview: Books for Libraries
P, 1972.
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_____. Collected Poems. Hartford: Transcendental Books, 1967.
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_____. Collected Poems of Harriet Beecher Stowe. Ed. John M. Moran,
Jr. ESQ: A Journal of the American Renaissance 49 (1967): 1-100.
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_____. The Daisy's First Winter and Other Stories. London: Nimmo;
Edinburgh: Gray, 1877.
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_____. A Dog's Mission; or, The Story of the Old Avery House, and other
Stories. London: Nelson and Sons, 1880.
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_____. Dred; a tale of the Great Dismal Swamp. 1856. New York: AMS
P, 1970.
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_____. Elisabeth of the Wartburg. Boston: Liberty Bell, 1856.
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_____. First Geography for Children. Boston: Phillips, Sampson and
Co., 1855.
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_____. Flowers and Fruit from the writings of Harriet Beecher Stowe.
Boston and New York: Houghton, Mifflin and Co., 1888.
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_____. Footsteps of the Master. New York: Ford and Co., 1877.
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_____. Four Ways of Observing the Sabbath: Sketches from the Note Book
of an Elderly Gentleman. Liverpool: Howell, 1853.
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_____. The Gift, a Christmas and New Year's present for 1840. With
Eliza Leslie and Deacon Enos. Edgar Allen Poe. Philadelphia: Carey &
Hart, 1839.
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_____. He's coming tommorrow. Boston: Advent Christian Publication
Society, 1874.
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_____. History of the Edmonson Family. Andover: The Author, 1852.
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_____. House and Home Papers. 1864. Boston: Ticknor and Fields,
1865.
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_____. Household Papers and Stories. Boston and New York: Houghton,
Mifflin and Co., 1896.
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_____. "June Studies." June Days: thirty poems by friends of the Union
for Home Work. Hartford: Case, Lockwood & Brainard, 1880.
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_____. A Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin; Presenting the Original Facts and
Documents Upon Which they Story is Founded Together with Corroborative
Statements Verifying the Truth of the Work. 1853. Port Washington:
Kennikat P, 1968.
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_____. Lady Byron Vindicated; a History of the Byron Contraversy, from
its beginnings in 1816 to the present time. 1870. New York: Haskell
House, 1970.
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_____. "Let Every Man Mind his own Business." The Christian Keepsake
and Missionary Annual. 1839: 239-264.
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_____. Light After Darkness: Religious Poems. London: Sampson Low,
Son and Marston, 1867.
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_____. Little Foxes; or, The Little Failings that Mar Domestic Happiness.
Boston: Ticknor and Fields, 1866.
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_____. Little Pussy Willow, also, The Minister's Watermelons. Boston:
Houghton, Mifflin and Co., 1881.
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_____. The May Flower, and Miscellaneous Writings. 1855. Freeport:
Books for Libraries P, 1972.
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_____. Men of our Times; or, Leading Patriots of the Day. Hartford:
Hartford Publishing Co.; New York: Denison, 1868.
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_____. The Minister's Wooing. 1859. Intro. Sandra R. Duguid. Hartford:
Stowe-Day Foundation, 1978.
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_____. Ministration of Departed Spirits . . . Boston: American Liberal
Tract Society, 1870.
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_____. Mrs. H. B. Stowe on Dr. Monod and the American Tract Society
Considered in Relation to American Slavery. [Edinburgh?]: Reprinted
for the Edinburgh Ladies' Emancipation Society, 1858.
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_____. My Wife and I: or, Harry Henderson's History. 1871. New York:
Ford and Co., 1874.
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_____. Nelly's Heroics with Other Heroic Stories. Boston: Lothrop
Co, 1883.
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_____. Oldtown Folks. 1869. Intro. and Ed. Dorothy Berkson. New
Brunswick: Rutgers UP, 1987.
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_____. One Year. N. p.: n. p., n.d.
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_____. The Other World. N. p.: n. p., n.d.
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_____. Our Charley and What to do with him. Boston: Phillips, Sampson,
1858.
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_____. Palmetto-leaves. 1873. Intro. by M. B. Graff and E. Cowles.
Gainesville: U of Florida P, 1968.
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_____. The Pearl of Orr's Island: A Story of the Coast of Maine. 1862.
Intro. E. Bruce Kirkham. Hartford: Stowe-Day Foundation, 1979.
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_____. Pink and White Tyranny: A Society Novel. 1871. Intro. Judith
Martin. New York: New American Library, 1988.
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_____. Poganuc People: Their Loves and Lives. 1878. Intro. Joesph
S. Van Why. Hartford: Stowe-Day Foundation, 1977.
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_____. Queer Little People. 1867. New York: Fords, Howard, and Hulbert,
1881.
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_____. Regional Sketches: New England and Florida. Ed. John R. Adams.
New Haven: College and UP, 1972.
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_____. Religious Poems. Boston: Ticknor and Fields, 1867.
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_____. Religious Studies: Sketches and Poems. Cambridge: Riverside
P, 1896.
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_____. A reply to "The Affectionate and Christian Address of Many Thousands
of Women of Great Britian and Ireland, to their Sisters, the Women of the
United States of America." London: S. Low, Son, and Co., 1863.
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_____. Sam Lawson's Oldtown Fireside Stories. 1871. Ridgewood: Gregg
P, 1967. [Notes: The Ghost in the Mill. -- The Minister's Housekeeper.
-- The Sullivan Looking-glass. -- The Window's Bandbox. -- Captain Kidd's
Money. -- Mis' Elderkin's Pitcher. -- The Ghost in the Cap'n Brown House.
-- Colonel Eph's Shoebuckles. -- The Bull-fight. -- How to Fight the Devil.
-- Laughin' in Meetin'. -- Tom Toothacre's Ghost Story. -- The Parson's
Horse-Race. -- Oldtown Fireside Talks of the Revolution. -- The Student's
Sea Story. ]
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_____. Six of one by Half a Dozen of the Other. Ed. Edward Everett
Hale. Boston: Roberts Brothers, 1872.
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_____. "Sojourner
Truth, The Libyan Sibyl" Atlantic Monthly 11 (April 1863): 473-481.
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_____. Sojourner Truth, The Libyan Sibyl Charlottesville: U of Virginia
Library, 1994.
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_____. "Some Foreign Tributes to Lincoln." Ed. by Harriet Beecher Stowe.
Lincoln's Birthday. New York: Moffat, Yard & Co., 1909. 202-210.
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_____. Stories, Sketches, and Studies. 1896. New York: AMS P, 1976.
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_____. Stories and Sketches for the Young. Cambridge: Riverside
P, 1896.
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_____. Sunny Memories of Foreign Lands. Boston: Phillips, Sampson,
and Co.; New York: Derby, 1854.
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_____. "The Tea Rose". Godey's Lady's Book. 24: (March 1842) 145-147.
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_____. The True Story of Lady Byron's Life. London: Macmillan's
Magazine, 1869.
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_____. Uncle Sam's Emancipation; Earthly Care a Heavenly Discipline;
and other sketches. 1853. Detroit: Negro History P, 196?. [Notes: Account
of Mrs. Beecher Stowe and her Family, by an Alabama Man. -- Uncle Sam's
Emancipation. -- Earthly Care; a Heavenly Discipline. -- A Scholar's Adventure
in the County. -- Children. -- The Two Bibles. -- Letter from Maine no.
1. -- Letter from Maine no. 2. -- Christmas; or, the Good Fairy. ]
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_____. Uncle Sam's Emancipation; Earthly Care a Heavenly Discipline;
and other tales and sketches. 1853. Freeport: Books for Libraries P,
1970. [Notes: Uncle Sam's Emancipation. -- Earthly Care; a Heavenly
Discipline. -- Hymn. -- The Unfaithful Steward. -- A Scholar's Adventure
in the Country. -- Woman, Behold thy Son, part one. -- Woman, Behold thy
Son, part two. -- The Two Bibles. -- More Blessed to Give than to Receive.
-- Children. -- Christmas; or, the Good Fairy. -- The Two Altars: 1. The
Altar of Liberty, or 1776. -- The Two Altars: 2. The Altar of Slavery,
1850. -- The Freeman's Dream. -- The New Year's Gift. -- Letters from Maine,
letter 1. -- Letters from Maine, letter2. ]
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_____. Uncle
Tom's Cabin or, Life among the Lowly. 1852. New York: Vintage Books,
1991.
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_____. We and our Neighbors; or, The Records of an Unfashionable Street.
1873. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin, and Co., 1896.
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_____. We Young Folks: Original Stories for Boys and Girls. Boston:
D. Lothrop, 1886.
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_____. Women in Sacred History. 1873. New York: Portland House,
1990.
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_____. Women in Sacred History; a Series of Sketches Drawn from Scriptural,
Historical, and Legendary Sources. London: Low, Marston, Low and Searle;
New York: Ford and
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Co., 1874.
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_____. The Writings of Harriet Beecher Stowe. New York: AMS P, 1967.
[Notes: v. 1-2. Uncle Tom's Cabin; or, Life Among the Lowly. --
v. 3-4. Dred, together with Anti-slavery Tales and Papers, and Life
in Florida After the War. -- v. 5. The Minister's Wooing. --
v. 6. The Pearl of Orr's Island. -- v. 7. Agnes of Sorrento.
-- v. 8. Household Papers and Stories. -- v. 9-10. Oldtown
Folks, and Sam Lawson's Oldtown Fireside Stories. -- v. 11. Poganuc
People, and Pink and White Tyranny. -- v. 12. My Wife and I; or,
Harry Henderson's History. -- v. 13. We and our Neighbors; or, The
Records of an Unfashionable Street. -- v. 14. Stories, Sketches,
and Studies. -- v. 15. Religious Studies, Sketches, and Poems. --
v. 16. Stories and Sketches for the Young. ]
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_____. Stowe also edited two publications: Hearth and Home (Dec.
26, 1868-1875) and The Youth's Magazine and Juvenile Harp (1841-?)
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Stowe, Catharine Esther and Harriet Beecher Stowe. The American Woman's
Home: or Principles of Domestic Science: being a Guide to the Formation
and Maintenance of Economical, Healthiful, Beautiful, and Christian Home.
Hartford: Stowe-Day Foundation, 1975.
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Stowe, Charles Edward. Harriet Beecher Stowe in Europe: the Journal
of Charles Beecher. Ed. Joseph S. Van Why and Earl French. Hartford:
Stowe-Day Foundation, 1986.
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_____. Life of Harriet Beecher Stowe, compiled from her letters and
journals by her son, Charles Edward Stowe. 1889. Detroit: Gale Research
Co., 1967.
Secondary Sources:
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Adams, John R. Harriet Beecher Stowe; Updated Version. Boston: Twayne
Pub., 1989.
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_____. "Structure and Theme in the Novels of Harriet Beecher Stowe." American
Transcendental Quarterly 24 (1974): 50-55.
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Ahlstrom, Sydney E. A Religious History of the American People. New
Haven: Yale UP, 1973.
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Allen, Peter R. "Lord Macaulay's Gift to Harriet Beecher Stowe: The Solution
to a Riddle in Trevelyan's Life." Notes and Queries 17 (1970): 23-24.
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Ammons, Elizabeth. "Heroines in Uncle Tom's Cabin." American Literature:
A Journal of Literary History, Criticism, and Bibliography 49 (1977):
161-79.
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Ammons, Elizabeth and Dorothy Berkson. Critical Essays on Harriet Beecher
Stowe. Boston: Hall, 1980.
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Anderson, Beatrice A. "Uncle Tom: A Hero at Last." American Transcendental
Quarterly 5.2 (June 1991): 95-108.
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Arner, Robert D. "Jeffersonian Idealism and the Southern Frontier: A Reading
of Uncle Tom's Cabin." New Historical Perspectives: Essays on the Black
Experience in Antebellum America. Cincinnati: Friends of Harriet Beecher
Stowe House and Citzen's Committe on Youth, 1984.
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Ashton, Jean W. Harriet Beecher Stowe: A Reference Guide. Boston:
Hall, 1978.
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_____. "Harriet Stowe's Filthy Story: Lord Byron Set Afloat." Prospects:
Annual of American Culture Studies 2 (1976): 373-84.
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Askeland, Lori. "Remodeling the Model Home in Uncle Tom's Cabin and Beloved."
American Literature: A Journal of Literary History, Criticism, and Bibliography
64.4 (Dec 1992): 785-805.
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Baker, Dorothy Z. "Puritan Providences in Stowe's The Pearl of Orr's Island:
The Legacy of Cotton Mather." Studies in American Fiction 22.1 (Spring
1994): 61-79.
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Banks, Marva. "Uncle Tom's Cabin and Antebellum Black Response." Readers
in History: Nineteenth-Century American Literature and the Contexts of
Response. Ed. James L. Machor. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 1993. 209-27.
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Baym, Nina. "Melodramas of Beset Manhood: How Theories of American Fiction
Exclude Women Authors." American Quarterly 23 (Summer, 1981) 123-39.
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_____. Novels, Readers, and Reviewers. Responses to Fiction in Antebellum
America. Ithaca: Cornell UP, 1984.
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_____. Woman's Fiction: A Guide to Novels by and About Women in America,
1820-1870. Ithaca: Cornell UP, 1978.
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Beach, Seth Curtis. Daughters of the Puritans; A Group of Brief Biographies.
1905. Freeport: Books for Libraries P, 1967.
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Beaver, Harold. "Time on the Cross: White Fiction and Black Messiahs."
Yearbook of English Studies 8 (1978): 40-53.
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Bellin, Joshua D. "Up to Heaven's Gate, Down in Earth's Dust: The Politics
of Judgment in Uncle Tom's Cabin." American Literature: A Journal of
Literary History, Criticism, and Bibliography 65.2 (June 1993): 275-95.
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Bender, Eileen T. "Repossessing Uncle Tom's Cabin: Toni Morrison's Beloved.
Sel. Papers from the Fourteenth Annual Florida State Univ. Conf. On Lit.
& Film." Cultural Power/Cultural Literacy. Ed. Bonnie Braendlin.
Tallahassee: Florida State UP, 1991. 129-42.
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Berkson, Dorothy. "'So We All Became Mothers': Harriet Beecher Stowe, Charolette
Perkins Gilman, and the New World of Women's Culture." Feminism, Utopia,
and Narrative. Ed. Libby Falk Jones and Sarah Webster Goodwin. Knoxville:
U of Tennessee P, 1990.
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Bode, Carl. The Anatomy of American Popular Culture 1840-1861. Berkeley
and Los Angeles: U of California P, 1959.
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Boyd, Richard. "Violence and Sacrificial Displacement in Harriet Beecher
Stowe's Dred." Arizona Quarterly: A Journal of American Literature,
Culture, and Theory 50.2 (Summer 1994): 51-72.
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______. "Models of Power in Harriet Beecher Stowe's Dred." Studies in
American Fiction 19.1 (Spring 1991): 15-30.
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Boydston, Jeanne, Mary Kelly, and Anne Throne Margolis. The Limits of
Sisterhood: the Beecher Sisters on Women's Rights and Woman's Sphere. Chapel
Hill: U of North Carolina P, 1988.
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Brandstadter, Evan. "Uncle Tom and Archy Moore: The Antislavery Nove as
Ideological Symbol." American Quarterly 26 (1974): 160-75.
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Brown, Gillian. Domestic Individualism: Imagining Self in Nineteenth
Century America. Berkeley: U of California P, 1990.
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_____. "Getting in the Kitchen with Dinah: Domestic Politics in Uncle Tom's
Cabin." American Quarterly 36.4 (Fall 1984): 503-523.
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Brunson, Martha L. "Novelists as Platform Readers: Dickens, Clemens, and
Stowe." Performance of Literature in Historical Perspectives. Eds.
David W. Thompson, Wallace A. Bacon, Eugene Bahn, Lee Hudson, and Alethea
S. Mattingly. Lanham: UP of America, 1983.
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Buell, Lawrence. "Calvinism Romanticized: Harriet Beecher Stowe, Samuel
Hopkins, and The Minister's Wooing." ESQ: A Journal of the American
Renaissance 24 (1978): 119-32.
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_____. "Rival Romantic Interpretations of New England Puritanism: Hawthorne
versus Stowe." Texas Studies in Literature and Language 25.1 (Spring
1983): 77-99.
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Rev. of The Cabin and the Parlor: Or Slaves and Masters, by J. Thornton
Randolph. The Southern Literary Messenger Nov. 1852: 703.
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Cady, Edwin. "'As through a Glass Eye, Darkly': The Bible in the Nineteenth-Century
American Novel." The Bible and American Arts and Letters. Ed. Giles
Gunn. Philadelphia: Scholars, 1983. 33-55.
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Camfield, Gregg. "The Moral Aesthetics of Sentimentality: A Missing Key
to Uncle Tom's Cabin." Nineteenth-Century Literature 43.3 (Dec 1988):
319-45.
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Cass, Jeffrey. "Harriet Beecher Stowe's Acts of Theological Terror: Conservatism
in Uncle Tom's Cabin." Selected Essays from the International Conference
on Word and World of Discovery. Carrollton: Dept. of English, West
Georgia Coll., 1992. 21-30.
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Cassara, Ernest. "The Rehabilitation of Uncle Tom: Significant Themes in
Mrs. Stowe's Antislavery Novel." College Language Association Journal
17 (1973): 230-40.
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Cherniavsky, Eva. "Revivification and Utopian Time: Poe versus Stowe."
The American Face of Edgar Allen Poe. Eds. Shawn Rosenheim and Stephen
Rachman. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins, 1995. 121-38.
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Child, Lydia Maria. An Appeal for that Class of Americans Called Africans.
Boston: Allen & Ticknor, 1833.
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_____. The Letters of Lydia Maria Child. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin
and Co., 1883.
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Clark, Rev. D.W. "Literary Women of America. Number XII. Mrs. Harriet Beecher
Stowe." Ladies' Repository (March 1858): 171-74.
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Cole, Phyllis. "Stowe, Jacobs, Wilson: White Plots and Black Counterplots."
New Perspectives on Gender, Race, and Class in Society. Ed. Audrey
T. McCluskey. Bloomington: Indiana Univ, 1990. 23-45.
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Cott, Nancy F., ed. Root of Bitterness. Documents of the Social History
of American Women. Boston: Northeastern UP, 1972.
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_____. The Bonds of Womanhood: "Woman's Sphere" in New England 1780-1835.
New Haven, CT: Yale UP, 1977.
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Cott, Nancy F. and Elizabeth H. Pleck. A Heritage of Her Own: Toward
a New Social History of American Women. New York: Simon and Schuster,
1979.
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Coultrap-McQuin, Susan. Doing Literary Business. American Women Writers
in the Nineteenth Century. Chapel Hill: The U of North Carolina P,
1990.
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Cox, James M. "Harriet Beecher Stowe: From Sectionalism to Regionalism."
Nineteenth-Century Literature 38.4 (March 1984): 444-446.
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Cox, John F. "Uncle Tom's Cabin: A Pre-Raphaeltie Reaction." Notes and
Queries 22 (1975): 111-12.
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Cross, Barbara M. "Stowe, Harriet Beecher." Notable American Women,
1607-1950. Cambridge: Belknap P, 1971.
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Crosthwaite, Jane. "Women and Wild Beasts: Versions of the Exotic in Nineteenth
Century American Art." Southern Humanities Review 19.2 (Spring 1985):
97-114.
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Crumpacker, Laurie. "Four Novels of Harriet Beecher Stowe: A Study in Nineteenth-Century
Androgyny." American Novelists Revisited: Essays in Feminist Criticism.
Boston: Hall, 1982.
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Davidson, Cathy N., ed. Reading in America: Literature & Social
History. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins UP, 1989.
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_____. Revolution and the Word: The Rise of the Novel in America. Oxford:
Oxford UP, 1986.
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Davis, Richard B. "Mrs. Stowe's Characters-in-Situations and a Southern
Literary Tradition." Essays on American Literature in Honor of Jay B.
Hubbell. Ed. Clarence Gohdes. Durham: Duke UP, 1967.
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DeCanio, Stephen J. "Uncle Tom's Cabin: A Reappraisal." The Centennial
Review 34.4 (Fall 1990): 587-593.
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Donovan, Josephine. Uncle Tom's Cabin. Evil, Affliction, and Redemptive
Love. Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1991.
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_____. "Harriet Beecher Stowe's Feminism." American Transcendental Quarterly
47-48 (Summer-Fall 1980): 141-157.
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Dorsey, Peter A. "De-Authorizing Slavery: Realism in Stowe's Uncle Tom's
Cabin and Brown's Clotel." ESQ: A Journal of the American Renaissance
41.4 (1995): 256-88.
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Douglas, Ann. The Feminization of American Culture. New York: Alfred
A. Knopf, 19
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Duvall, John N. "Authentic Ghost Stories: Uncle Tom's Cabin, Absalom, Absalom!,
and Beloved." The Faulkner Journal 4.1-2 (Fall 1988-Spring 1989):
83-97.
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Duvall, Severn. "Uncle Tom's Cabin: The Sinister Side of Patriarchy." The
New England Quarterly: A Historical Review of New England Life and Letters
36 (1963): 3-22.
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Eakin, Paul John. The New England Girl: Cultural Ideals in Hawthorne,
Stowe, Howells, and James. Athens: U of Georgia P, 1976.
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Egberts, Oliver. "The Little Cabin of Uncle Tom." College English
26 (1965): 355-361.
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Emig, Janet A. "The Flower in the Cleft: The Writings of Harriet Beecher
Stowe." Bulletion of the Historical and Philosophical Society of Ohio
21 (1963): 223-238.
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Felker, Christopher D. Reinventing Cotton Mather in the American Renaissance:
Magnalia Christia Americana in Hawthorne, Stowe, and Stoddard. Boston:
Northeastern UP, 1994.
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Fiedler, Leslie. "Home as Haven, Home as Hell: Uncle Tom's Canon." Rewriting
the Dream: Reflections on the Changing American Literary Canon. Amsterdam:
Rodopi, 1992. 22-42.
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Fields, Annie. Life and Letters of Harriet Beecher Stowe. Detroit:
Gale Research Co., 1970.
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Fisch, Audrey A. "'Exhibiting Uncle Tom in Some Shape of Other': The Commodification
and Reception of Uncle Tom's Cabin in England." Nineteenth-Century Contexts
17.2 (1993): 145-58.
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Fisher, Philip. "Partings and Ruins: Radical Sentimentality in Uncle Tom's
Cabin." Amerikastudien/American Studies 28.3 (1983): 279-293.
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Fleischner, Jennifer. "Mothers and Sisters: The Family Romance of Antislavery
Women Writers." Feminist Nightmares: Women at Odds: Feminism and the
Problem of Sisterhood. Eds. Susan Ostrov Weisser and Jennifer Fleischner.
New York: New York UP, 1994. 125-41.
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Fluck, Winfried. "The Power and Failure of Representation in Harriet Beecher
Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin." New Literary History: A Journal of Theory
and Interpretation 23.2 (Spring 1992): 319-38.
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Foreman, P. Gabrielle. "'This Promiscuous Housekeeping': Death, Transgression,
and Homoeroticism in Uncle Tom's Cabin." Representations 43 (Summer
1993): 51-72.
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Fredrickson, George M. The Black Image in the White Mind: The Debate
on Afro-American Character and Destiny, 1817-1914. New York: Harper
and Row, 1971.
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Freibert, Lucy M. and Barbara A. White. Hidden Hands, An Anthology of
American Women Writers, 1790-1870. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers UP, 1985.
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Fritz, Jean. Harriet Beecher Stowe and the Beecher Preachers. New
York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1994.
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Furnas, J.C. Goodbye to Uncle Tom. New York: William Sloane Associates,
1956.
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Gabler-Hover, Janet. Truth in American Fiction. The Legacy of Rhetorical
Idealism. Athens: U of Georgia P, 1990.
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Gardiner, Jane. "The Assault upon Uncle Tom: Attempts of Pro-Slavery Novelists
to Answer Uncle Tom's Cabin, 1952-1860." Southern Humanities Review
12 (1978): 313-24.
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Geary, Susan. "Harriet Beecher Stowe, John P. Jewett, and Author-Publisher
Relations in 1853." Studies in the American Renaissance (1977):
345-67.
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Goodman, Charlotte. "From Uncle Tom's Cabin to Vyry's Kitchen: The Black
Female Folk Tradition in Margaret Walker's Jubilee." Tradition and the
Talents of Women. Ed. Florence Howe. Chicago: U of Illinois P, 1990.
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Goshgarian, G.M. To Kiss the Chastening Rod: Domestic Fiction and Sexual
Ideology in the American Renaissance. Ithaca: Cornell UP, 1992.
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Graham, Thomas. "Harriet Beecher Stowe and the Question of Race." The
New England Quarterly: A Historical Review of New England Life and Letters
46 (?): 614-22.
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Greene, Gayle. Changing the Story, Feminist Fiction and the Tradition.
Bloomington: Indiana U P, 1991.
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Grinstein, Alexander. "Uncle Tom's Cabin and Harriet Beecher Stowe: Beating
Fantasies and Thoughts of Death." American Image: A Psychoanalytic Journal
for Culture, Science, and the Arts 40.2 (Summer 1983): 115-144.
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Hale, Sarah Josepha. Biography of Distinguished Women; or Woman's Record,
from the Creation of A.D. 1869. 3rd ed., revised. New York: Harper
& Bros., 1876.
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_____. Flora's Interpreter, and Fortuna Flora. 1832. Boston: Chase
and Nichols, 1865.
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Hamand, Wendy F. "'No Voice from England': Mrs. Stowe, Mr. Lincoln, and
the British in the Civil War." The New England Quarterly: A Historical
Review of New England Life and Letters 61.1 (March 1988): 3-24.
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Hanaford, Phebe A. Daughters of America; or, Women of the Century. Augusta:
True and Co., 1882.
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Harris, Susan K. 19th-Century American Women's Novels. Interpretive
Strategies. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1990.
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Hart, James D. The Popular Book, a History of America's Literary Taste.
Berkeley: U of California P, 1950.
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Hart, John S. The Female Prose Writers of America. Philadelphia:
E.H. Butler & Co., 1852.
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Haskell, John D., Jr. "Addenda to Hildreth: Harriet Beecher Stowe." PBSA:
Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 72 (1978): 348.
-
Hedrick, Joan D. Harriet Beecher Stowe: A Life. New York: Oxford
UP, 1994.
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______. "'Peaceable Fruits': The Ministry of Harriet Beecher Stowe." American
Quarterly 40.3 (Sept 1988): 307-332.
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Henning, Martha L. Beyond
Understanding: Appeals to the Imagination, Passions, and Will in Mid-Nineteenth-Century
American Women's Fiction. New York: Peter Lang Publishing, Inc.,
1996. 1(800)770-5264
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Henson, Josiah. Uncle Tom's Story of his Life: an Autobiography of the
Rev. Josiah Henson, 1789-1876; with a preface by Harriet Beecher Stowe
and an Introductory Note by George Sturge and S. Morley; edited by John
Lobb. London: Cass, 1971.
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Hildreth, Margaret Holbrook. Harriet Beecher Stowe: a Bibliography.
Hamden: Archon Books, 1976.
-
Hill, Herbert. "'Uncle Tom' An Enduring American Myth." Crisis 72
(1965): 289-95.
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Hirsh, Stephen A. "Uncle Tomitudes: The Popular Reaction to Uncle Tom's
Cabin." Studies in the American Reinassance (1978) 303-30.
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Hovet, Grace Ann and Theodore R. Hovet. "TABLEAUX VIVANTS: Masculine Vision
and Feminine Reflections in Novels by Warner, Alcott, Stowe, and Wharton."
American Transcendental Quarterly 7.4 (Dec 1993): 335-56.
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Hovet, Theodore R. "Christian Revolution: Harriet Beecher Stowe's Response
to Slavery and the Civil War." The New England Quarterly: A Historical
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(c) Martha L. Henning & Susan Goodwin
Martha L. Henning, Ph.D.
mhenning@zeus.cc.pcc.edu
Division of English and Modern Languages
Portland Community College
P.O. Box 19000
Portland, OR 97280-0990