It is common knowledge that books transformed into movies are prone to decline in quality; only in very rare occasions do the roles of this alternate. There is even a further infrequency when both the book and the film demonstrate equal quality and excellence. A Raisin In The Sun by Lorraine Hansberry embodies this rarity. A renowned play written by a black woman in the heart of the Civil Rights movement is an accomplishment in itself, however, having success and additionally, a produced movie, raises it to a completely new level. CHANGING CHARACTERS SOMETIMES WORKS OUT FOR THE BEST BECAUSE IT ADDS MORE TO THE COMPLEXITY OF THEIR LIFE. MAKES THINGS MORE PERSONAL. RUTH IS THIS EXAMPLE. Hansberry’s A Raisin In The Sun demonstrates a lesser complexity …show more content…
One day, her mother-in-law, Lena, finally seeks to convince her to stay home when she is evidently ill; it gives a perfect mold for the books image. While this is exemplified in both the play and film, the play fails to give insight into how Ruth has been personally burdened by the many life decisions of her husband, Walter. In contrast, the movie brings a strength-like attitude to her as she becomes the glue that holds the Younger family together through the $10,000 financial conflict. In a particular scene of the film, even before the money arrives, Ruth and Walter have a dispute regarding the sleeping arrangement for their son, Travis. She stands strong to the fact that Walter needs to limit the late-night invitation of his friends to their small appartment, which keeps Travis from sleep. Her confidence and emotional independence from her husband is something that cannot be exemplified in the book, but instead brought to life in the movie. While in most cases, book-to-movie conversions end in a declination of quality, A Raisin In The Sun does the opposite; how the original play represents each character is inferior to what the watcher learns about them from the film. The movie differs from the play due to the newly distinct spotlight placed on Ruth. The intricacy of her life is broadened significantly as her self-determination and strong will is pulled to the surface, giving a deeper insight her
A raisin in the sun is a book by Lorraine Hansberry that tells the story of a lower-class black family's struggle to gain middle-class acceptance while facing internal family conflicts the book was written in 1959, so the movie is an interpretation of the book. Yet the movie made it seem as if Walter is a very selfish man. Reading the book brings a different visualization .The movie also was able to move to different locations, the book however, which was written originally to be acted out on stage. Yet besides all the differences, a common theme ran though in both the book and the movie
Ruth is married to Walter Lee, she is frustrated and just plain tire of the way she is living and Walter Lee is treating her and the family. She is tired of her husband’s get rich ideas, but still seeks to please him and
In Lorraine Hansberry’s “A Raisin in the Sun” (1959), she reveals the life of the Youngers family. In doing so, there surfaces a detrimental ideology that destroys the family financially and in their overall happiness. In Act II Scene I, Walter, the father figure of the family, says, “Why? You want to know why? 'Cause we all tied up in a race of people that don 't know how to do nothing but moan, pray and have babies!” (Hansberry 532). By way of explanation, the family and much of the African-American community for the 1960’s, is built upon a loose ideology that is a brutal cycle that infects the lives of those who inhabit the area; tired of all the commotion from the Caucasians who, to them, miraculously achieve a life of ruling and
Acts I and II in the play A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry, mostly consisted of the Younger family discussing their problems of how they are not happy with the way they are living, along with what Lena should do with the insurance check she is receiving in the mail from the death of her husband. Walter, Lena’s son, believes Lena will give all the money to him so he can start business selling liquor with two of his friends. Walter says to his wife, Ruth, “You see, this little liquor store we got in mind cost seventy-five thousand and we figured the initial investment on the place be ‘bout thirty thousand, see. That be ten thousand each. ”(984).
Lorraine Hansberry’s play, A Raisin in the Sun features an African American family in the late 1950’s as they look forward to achieving their individual dreams in the era where racism and economic hardship among African Americans was the norm. While Hansberry doesn’t directly mention well-known events in the civil rights movement, she illustrates the realistic struggles an African American family would have faced during this time. In the introduction of the play, Robert Nemiroff illustrates several themes and issues that are addressed throughout Hansberry’s play. One of the subjects Nemiroff mentions is the “value systems of the black family”(Nemiroff, “Introduction,” 5-6). A main value that Hansberry illustrates throughout the play is the
A Raisin in the Sun is a play written by Lorraine Hansberry, this play also comes in a series of movies. In the movie version of A Raisin in the Sun, directed by Leon Kenny, there are many similarities and differences from the play. In the play, for example, a difference is that Mama talks about the check with Walter in their apartment, but in the movie they talk in a diner after Mama finds Walter in a bar. Another difference is that Travis was in the play a lot, but in the movie he was hardly included. A similarity, however, is that Mama gives her same speech about how loving someone when they are down is the best thing you can do for them. The movie version was set in the time period of the Civil Rights Movement, and the play was not set in that time period. While both versions of A Raisin in the Sun address the similarities and differences, the differences exceed the similarities, hence a teacher must show the movie and the play so the students can understand the significance of both.
Money is a major struggle for some families in the 1950’s. Lorraine Hansberry’s play, A Raisin In The Sun, shows that in multiple ways. The father in the family, Walter Lee Sr. passed away, and all the family has to look forward to is the life insurance check of ten-thousand dollars. The younger family is Mama, Walter , Beneatha , and Ruth. Ruth is married to Walter and they have a son named Travis. Another thing that causes major problems is the fact that Ruth is pregnant. This causes more problems because there is barely enough room in the house to begin with.
There is no doubt that Lorraine Hansberry uses her play, A Raisin in the Sun, as a platform to give her opinions and observations on the black community and of the racism they faced in the mid-1900s. Her play is filled with commentary
How does a man that struggles to provide for his family while wanting to pursue big personal goals handle his life? For many men, that is a very good question that with a tough answer. In A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry, Walter Lee Younger faces the difficult challenge of raising a family in the 1950s Chicago, which is a heavily racist era. He wants nothing but the best for his family, while also trying to make a name for himself. Walter Lee Younger undergoes many emotional and personality changes, trying to find himself and find out how to provide for his family. From being a man as stubborn as a rock, to one who has learned to appreciate the situations given to him and his family, Walter shows that there can more to life than money
The struggles of being African American have been very evident throughout history. To present day many African Americans (commonly referred to as "black") endure injustice and inequality. As many racial protests and movies have been made to depict such hardships, so have books. The controversial topics of racism and gender roles are spread throughout A Raisin in the Sun. Lorraine Hansberry lived through such a time where racial and gender discrimination was at its highest point; which she portrays in her book. As the Younger family eventually developed into a family so do the gender issues. My goal in this paper is to identify gender injustice as it has been dominantly illustrated, whether that be where the women stand or what the men should be doing as opposed to the women having higher power.
In the novel, A Raisin in the Sun written by Lorraine Hansberry , shows the reader how society was viewed back then in the 1950s .It was tough for african american lives. An African american family living on the southside of Chicago in the 1950s. The play opens from receiving a 10,000 thousand dollar insurance check to do whatever they want with it. Living with five people in a tiny- one bedroom apartment puts the environment pressures high. The book portrays the idea of a dream within all the African american characters shown differently and the different struggles they have to live with in a world of racism, social standards/higher expectations, and regret fullness. Walter Lee Younger, the man of the house, truly encapsulates the American
In the play, A Raisin in the Sun, by Lorraine Hansberry all the characters have big dreams, especially Mama. Mama’s dream and personality affects the dream’s of everyone around her in either a positive or negative way. Her caring, honest, and grateful characteristics help her develop the theme of dreams.
Family is the most important thing in the world. They are the people that no matter what happens they will always love, but they also are people that can cause quarrels and tension. Lorraine Hansberry, playwright of "A Raisin in the Sun", uses the character of Momma, or Lena, to express the theme of family, by supporting Ruth when she finds out the pregnancy, by giving up her dream of having a house with a garden, and by believing in Walter no matter what he does. The first example of how Mama displays the theme of family, is when she comforts and supports Ruth when she finds out about the pregnancy.
In Lorraine Hansberry’s play “Raisin in the Sun” many of the characters struggle to achieve their dreams and often have them deferred due to race and gender. In the play, an African American family must learn how to live in a time period where racial segregation and gender inequality is normal and obvious. In the 1900s, men saw women as less superior. In Langston Hughes’ poem “Harlem”, it explains how dreams are deferred when it comes to the African American population. Hughes writes: “Does it dry up, /like a raisin in the sun?”(2-3). Hughes and Hansberry want to let everyone know the hardship African Americans dealt with and that at often times, their dreams were deferred. Racism made it difficult for some African American families to make
Rough Draft Having a solid mother son relationship when growing up is a vital part in child development. However, these relationships varies between families. The mothers and sons in the plays A Raisin in the Sun, written by Lorraine Hansberry, and Death of Salesman, written by Arthur Miller, demonstrate how these relationships vary from family to family. Linda and Biff, and Ruth and Travis are the mothers and sons in the plays.