life people have ups and downs; the characters in A Raisin in the Sun experience many highs and many lows. Throughout the story there are many decisions that the characters toss around and debate. Mama, the mother of the family, receives $10,000 which is a very large sum of money for their family. It is up to Mama to decide where the money should go. The Characters in the story developed and their true desires are shown through the choices they make. The characters are faced with many obstacles and
Have you ever wanted to help the people you love to gain a better way of life? Then a dream pops into your head, and you think that’s it. This is how I’ll do it. Well that is the story of Walter Lee. The play, A Raisin in The Sun, by Lorraine Hansberry involves a black family who is faced with the challenges of racism, their financial status, and overall a high level of stress due to a recent death of the patriarch, Walters dad. The death of Walter’s dad brings the family deep sorrow but with every
fought for educational opportunities and equality for all. The want and fight for these basic rights are shown in Lorraine Hansberry’s “A Raisin in the Sun”. Beneatha Younger, a main character in the book, demonstrated the want for an education. Although Beneatha Younger is not a real person, she still has a lot in common with Shirley Chisholm. In “A Raisin in the Sun”, Beneatha Younger is a young African American living in South Side, Chicago with her mother and her brother. During the play, she is
soul longs for the satisfaction of meeting a goal? The obstacles along the way may cause one trouble, but one still strives for that personal satisfaction of knowing something grand was accomplished. A Raisin In The Sun, written by Lorraine Hansberry, gives off many aspects of the story’s characters wanting the reward of being able to say, “I did it”. Beneatha Younger, a passionate, strong-willed woman will do whatever it takes to pursue her dream of attending medical school. Along the way of wanting
A Raisin in the Sun can be considered a turning point in American art because it addresses so many issues important during the 1950s in the United States. Hansberry creates in the Younger family one of the first honest depictions of a black family in an age when there was a lot of segregation throughout the country. The main plot line of this play includes the Younger family
In the play a Raisin in the Sun, Walter Lee Younger is an African American man who portrays the role of a father, son, and husband. He has a dream to invest the incoming inherence into something that may help his family in the future. Once this idea comes to him it takes over his mind, and he cannot stop thinking about it. It acts as though its a drug, he addicted to talking about it. Also, when it is brought up in a conversation and someone disagrees he become very defensive. In addition, he is
and preferences of the decision-maker. Our decisions are consequently what dictates our types of living conditions and can expand as far as determining our own health or the health of our families. In Lorraine Hansberry’s story A Raisin In The Sun the fictional character from the book, Mama, decides to use the insurance money she received from the loss of her husband to move out of her current neighborhood to move
There is a moment in A Raisin in the Sun when Beneatha is put in the position to question her identity in a way she has never done before, through her hair. This moment approaches when Asagai, a Nigerian man from the Yoruba tribe that Beneatha originally sought out because she was questioning her identity, teases her about her “mutilated hair” (Hansberry 513). Beneatha is taken aback by the remark and immediately questions her identity. This is shown in Lorraine Hansberry’s stage directions when
In the play “A Raisin in the Sun” written by Lorraine Hansberry, she is able to take us to place to see what it was like for an African American family to survive in the mid-twentieth century. The play details how the main characters are going through an evolving social and economic position, as well as the evolving gender roles. Hansberry uses the characterization of Beneatha, Ruth, and Walter in order to show the expectations and assigned gender roles for the characters in the story. In short
Dave Ramsey. Lorraine Hansberry’s play, A Raisin in the Sun, 1959 was about Walter and his family struggles in poverty living in a small apartment. Mama then receives $10,000 check from the insurance company and that’s when everything changes. By the end of the play Walter and his family, then move out to a new neighborhood where they will live happily and face new struggles that are worthwhile. Lorraine Hansberry reveals one of her themes through the character of Walter by showing us that family is