Out of disappointment, Mama says “I seen … him … night after night … come in … and look at that rug … and then look at me … the red showing in his eyes … the veins moving in his head … I seen him grow thin and old before he was forty … working and working and working like somebody’s old horse … killing himself … and you —you give it all away in a day—” (129). In this time, Mama feels betrayed, she is beating Walter out of spite, she wants her money back and she is distraught that her very own son would make such a careless mistake and give up everything they had. This conflict between Mama and Walter drives the story. The conflict results in Mama telling Walter in a time of desperation, “You show where our five generations done come to. Go ahead, son— Go ahead” (1). This gives Walter a sense of pride and he makes up for everything he has done to betray Mama. The conflict in the story is important because it makes the story the way it is. Without the conflict in the story, Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun would just be a story about a poor family that struggles to keep their needs met. Therefore, the conflict in the storyline unveils the sequence of events is developing the
Out of disappointment, Mama says “I seen … him … night after night … come in … and look at that rug … and then look at me … the red showing in his eyes … the veins moving in his head … I seen him grow thin and old before he was forty … working and working and working like somebody’s old horse … killing himself … and you —you give it all away in a day—” (129). In this time, Mama feels betrayed, she is beating Walter out of spite, she wants her money back and she is distraught that her very own son would make such a careless mistake and give up everything they had. This conflict between Mama and Walter drives the story. The conflict results in Mama telling Walter in a time of desperation, “You show where our five generations done come to. Go ahead, son— Go ahead” (1). This gives Walter a sense of pride and he makes up for everything he has done to betray Mama. The conflict in the story is important because it makes the story the way it is. Without the conflict in the story, Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun would just be a story about a poor family that struggles to keep their needs met. Therefore, the conflict in the storyline unveils the sequence of events is developing the