to an all-white neighborhood. After residents attacked their home, the state ruled that the Hansberrys had to move. In the appeal to the U.S Supreme Court Case, Hansberry v. Lee, the Hansberry family won. In 1957 Hansberry wrote the play, A Raisin in the Sun, which follows the Younger family as they navigate poverty, racism, and economic hardships while living in Chicago. Hansberry’s personal experience is evident throughout the play as the characters experience similar life events that she did.…
she has to cover the material. When it comes to literature units, such as the drama A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry, there are often movies to go along with the readings; in this case, the book was made into a movie, directed by Kenny Leon. Teachers must decide whether showing the movie will enhance or impede a student’s understanding of the play. In both the book and movie versions of A Raisin in the Sun, an impoverished African American family is living in Southside Chicago in the…
Susie Nguyen Gomez PAP English A Raisin in the Sun Families are most important in our lives in many ways. The book A Raisin in the Sun is a good example of why family relationships are important. This book shows us that family relations are most important because they keep everyone strong through success and struggles altogether. One character that shows importance to the family is Mama. She wants everybody to all be respectful to each other and have a good life. For example,…
asks the question of what unknown ways a dream will decay. The title of the book A Raisin in the Sun was named after one of Hughes questions. He asks if a dream will dry up like a raisin in the sun. The book A Raisin in the Sun features many distinct characters with their own ideologies and ambitious dreams. These characters would be Walter Lee Younger, Beneatha Younger, and Ruth Younger. A raisin drying up in the sun describes the many dreams that these three characters had. Because of the…
Throughout the span of one’s life, betrayal of others becomes an ordinary thing. In Lorraine Hansberry’s play A Raisin In The Sun, the Younger family is betrayed not only by external forces, but also by themselves. The betrayal begins at the beginning of the play when the much anticipated life insurance check valued at $10,000 finally arrives. This check; however, also brings reminders of their lost father and husband, Walter Lee Younger Sr. The reader becomes familiar with the Younger family,…
Throughout the play A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry, Mama’s Plant is clearly used to show the struggle of life in South-Side Chicago and how its residents tend to make the most out of everything they have. South-Side Chicago is notoriously known for being one of the worst areas to live in America as it has high crime, high poverty, high unemployment, low opportunity, lack of funding into the system, as well as a lack of proper schooling. Residents of this specific area are faced with…
Author, Lorraine Hansberry composes each member of the Younger family’s actions, dialogue, and relationships in such a way that they promote the formation of a recurring theme, the American Nightmare. Through the duration of A Raisin in the Sun the family lives along the lines of poverty but always carries their fantasy of being wealthy with them. Though each individual has their own version of the American Dream, they all find themselves constantly consumed in the hopes of possessing something…
What would you do if a $10,000 check showed up in your mailbox? The play, A Raisin in the Sun, by Lorraine Hansberry tells the story of an African-American family, the Younger’s, who live in Chicago. Hansberry was born in Chicago and has had many experiences similar to the Younger’s that led her to write A Raisin in the Sun. This play takes place around the 1950’s, a time when segregation was very active in Chicago. Each of the adults in the Younger family have their own dreams of what to do…
In the play, A Raisin in the Sun, written by Lorrain Hansberry, Beneatha has many qualities that are brought to light through-out the entire play. Her dream of becoming a doctor, her many ways of expressing herself, and the fact that she is an assimilationist are all shown throughout the play. When Beneatha was a little girl, she and some of the other children in her neighborhood, would pack the ice-covered steps of houses down the street with snow to sled down because there were no hills. While…
decreased a bit. Discrimination is wrong. Racism is wrong. People of all races, ethnicities, ages, and genders need to stop discrimination at all costs because it is unjust and hurts too many people. “Battle Royal” by Ralph Ellison and “A Raisin in the Sun” by Lorraine Hansberry include very good examples of discrimination against race and show how certain characters recover from their racial predicaments. Both authors use imagery, figurative language, and symbolism to demonstrate the…