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Analysis Of Lorraine Hansberry 's ' A Raisin Of The Sun '

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America has been affected by racism ever since slavery came to be. An example of racism would be a Caucasian man discriminating against an African-American man, solely based on the race of the African-American man. The United States, as a whole, has bettered itself in terms of racism, but this terrible trait has, and always will exist. Quite a few Americans still believe that African-Americans are inferior to Caucasians, and that they should still be slaves. “After Emancipation, black people struggled to define themselves with respect to their newly acquired freedom” (GOURDINE). In the fifties, blacks and whites could not even drink from the same water fountain. Schools being desegregated has helped young American people grow together in an educational environment, where they can build friendships with students of other races. Throughout the play, “A Raisin in the Sun”, Lorraine Hansberry vividly portrays the racism and discrimination of white people towards African-Americans in the fifties, as well as similarities to her own childhood. Walter Lee Younger, husband of Ruth Younger, works as a chauffeur for a rich white family, and he has a dream to open a liquor store of his own. He is concerned more about material things than his own family’s livelihood, but his wife tries everything she can to keep their family happy. When the love her and Walter used to share seems to come to an end, Ruth contemplates having an abortion. Though she does not follow through with the

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