Friday, October 25, 2019
An Analysis of A Raisin In the Sun :: Raisin Sun essays
      An Analysis of A Raisin In the Sun                   "A Raisin In The Sun" is a play  written by an African-American     playwright - Lorraine Hansberry. It was first produced in 1959. Lorraine     Hansberry's work is about a black family in the Chicago's South-Side  after     the Second World War. The family consisted of Mama(Lena Younger), Walter     Lee(her son), Ruth (his wife), Travis (their son), and Beneatha (Walters     younger sister). The Younger family lived in poor conditions, and can't     afford to have  better living standards. However, Lena is waiting to     receive a $10,000 check from her late-husbands insurance money. The two     main characters in the play, Mama and Walter, want this money to be used     for the benefits of the whole family. Even though both of them want to     benefit the family, each one has a different idea of what to do with the     money and how to manage it to benefit everyone.                 Walter Lee, like his father want's his family  to have a better life     and want's to invest the money in a liquor store. Walter want's the money     so that he can prove that he is capable of making a future for his  family.     By doing well in business Walter thinks that he can buy his family     happiness. Walter has dreams. Dreams he most likely got from his father.     Dreams of better life for his family and himself. A dream of financial     security and comfortable living. Ruth, on the other hand is stable and  down     to earth. She doesn't make rash choices to accommodate a dream. She will     just make do with what she has. Mama is a loving person, she is wise but     lives in the past. She is happy to have her family with and be safe from     society. She thinks that money is not something that makes a family  happy.                 Besides dreams Walter also has a husbands  responsibilities which     are universally thought of as being able to support his family and raise     his children so they are morally in line with what he believes in.  Walter's     problem, however, seems to be that he is building his supposedly well     thought out plan of investing money in a liquor store into something he  is     infactuated with. By creating this infactuation, he is not able to  achieve     his responsibilities. Besides having responsibilities Walter also has his     					    
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