Raisin In The Sun Segregation

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“What happens to a dream deferred? Does it dry up like a raisin in the sun? Or fester like a sore and then run? Does it stink like rotten meat? Or crust and sugar over, like a syrupy sweet? Maybe it just sags like a heavy load. Or does it explode? - Langston Hughes, (1951) This poem was written in the beginning of the book, A Raisin in the Sun, and shows how the play is an example of the black experience in Chicago through segregation and the hidden or blatant racism Black people like me experience. The play is written by Lorraine Hansberry a black female writer that wrote A Raisin in the Sun for Broadway. Lorraine Hansberry is from Chicago and understands what it is like to live in segregated housing in the city. A Raisin in the Sun revolves …show more content…
In the book written by Roger Biles called “Richard J. Daley: Politics, Race, and the Governing of Chicago”, Biles speaks about how MILK visited Chicago because of its housing projects. Biles stated, “Not only did more blacks occupied the city’s larger public housing projects than populated Selma, Alabama - the 1965 site of King’s greatest victory.”(119) What is interesting is that the play was very factual with its portrayal of Chicago during this time. Black Americans were very much segregated into the housing projects and dilapidated homes inside the black belt. What Lorraine did get wrong was the fact that black people were not allowed to even buy a house in white neighborhoods. This means that Lena Younger would not have been able to buy that house in the first place, because she would have had to visit the house in the first …show more content…
Although I have not been personally denied an apartment others have, and I understand how this racism is still significant. Second, A Raisin in the Sun also shows how racism in society is affecting the black family and how in Chicago, the racism is not in the forefront and is hidden. This hidden day to day racism can affect the pride and mental stability in a Black person, making them angry. Considering how this racism affected me, I can personally connect to a majority of the Younger family since I am still a kid that works and attends

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