In A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry, the characters Mr Lindner and Mrs. Johnson symbolize the foreshadow of the Younger’s destruction. Mr. Lindner tries to prevent the Younger family from living in Clybourne Park, an all white neighborhood. He symbolizes white supremacy and the end of hope for the Younger family because if the Youngers comply to his demands, their dreams will not come true and shows that whites are superior to blacks. After Walter calls Mr. Linder about the house in Clybourne Park, Beneatha says “All the talk about dreams and sunlight that goes on in this house. It’s all dead now” (143). If Walter gives in and sells their new house, it demonstrates how blacks are powerless to whites during the 1950s, which will completely
I also find that the characters in A Raisin in the Sun are over exaggerating the situation they are in given the archetypal standards they represent. Each character is representation of something generational, a gender or race issue, and it's a testament to Hansberry's writing that the characters don't come across as mouthpieces for the story. They are living, breathing human beings. It's not impossible at all to imagine the Younger family crowded together in their tiny roach-infested apartment on the south side of Chicago struggling, striving, and dreaming. “Who the hell told you you had to be a doctor?
He also explains that even today, African Americans are treated in an unequal fashion of some sort. Walter Younger is beginning to see the same things, he explains, Walter Younger made a bad investment decision,
Once she is down the stairs she is positioned in front of a mirror and we see how she stares at her self with enjoyment. We also see how she enjoys the attention of Walter watching her as she finishes buttoning up her dress and putting on her lipstick. When viewing the two characters we see that Phyllis admires her reflection in the mirror and while ignoring Walter we see how self-centered she can be. The mirror gives alertness to the viewers because she says to Walter “I hope I’ve got my face on straight”. This remark explains that mirror shots foreshadow a two-face deception and are a cinematic technique used in film noir that can create a reflection more powerful than the women they actually mirror (Place 1980).
“Choices made, whether bad or good, follow you forever and affect everyone in their path one way or another.” J.E.B. Spredemann. The theme I chose to analyze is choices and consequences. For this type of writing assignment, I’ve decided to choose the following readings. The poem titled Harlem was written by Langston Hughes in 1951.
Lorraine V. Hansberry Author Lorraine Hansberry, who is considered one of the Great American authors, wrote during the Modernist period. She wrote “A Raisin in the Sun” in 1959. In this work, we can see evidence of the characteristics, themes and style identified with the Modernist movement which was extant in American letters between 1850’s and after WWII. Lorraine Hansberry wrote during this time period of American literature, and such, remains one of the most identifiable and iconic writers of her time. Lorraine Hansberry was born on May 19, 1930 in Chicago, Illinois.
Things were completely disparate in the 1950’s from what they are now. Especially for African-American people, they had strong prejudices against them, which could make it impossible for them to do things in society. In Lorraine Hainsberry’s A Raisin in the Sun we meet the Younger family, an African American family in the 50’s, but we get to see them have dreams and attempt to follow those dreams. We get a close look at what a typical lifestyle would be for people in the same situation. The Younger family are fantastic examples of the American Dream, but they each have their own different dreams, and each dream has an outer shell plus a deeper meaning on the inside.
In Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun she uses characterization on Beneatha to suggest that the media or society is hard on black women. In the play it demonstrates how a black woman's dream is diminished, her looks as more important, to always being criticized. In Act I, it indicates that Beneatha wants to be a doctor and go to medical school. It is her dream to do so, but whenever it is brought up, it is either dismissed, compared to other people, or deemed not important.
Lorraine Hansberry wrote the book Raisin in The Sun in 1959. It is a story of an African American family trying to surpass racism and live like a white family. During this time when the book was written whites and African Americans didn’t get along. Hansberry included important characters; however, Ruth influences the plot the most.
He initially contemplates accepting Mr. Lindner's offer, as he believes it could solve their financial troubles. However, Mama's unwavering pride and her reminder of their ancestors' struggles ignite a newfound determination in Walter. He realizes that their fight is not just about moving into a house, but about preserving their legacy and standing up against
The Younger family, is a family who are honest and who also work hard for what they want, just because they are black, does not mean that they don 't deserve to live in a better neighbourhood. However, racism also impacted the Younger family beneficially in the way Walter rejected Linders’s offer at the end of the play. The example of racism gives Walter the opportunity to become the man he always wanter to
Does society care about people who gets discriminated or the fact that there are many people in poverty of money problems? Well that's a question to be answered by our societies , that many people who’d wish to live a life without money problems nor living in poverty, or it could just be the fact that they don’t like being discriminated by other people, they would want that question to be answered the most. That’s what “Raisin in the Sun” is all about, a poor family from Chicago South Side during the late 1950’s and they high hopes of living a more happy life than living a more uncomfortable and depressing life. The family is consisting of five people, Walter, Mama, Beneatha, Ruth, and Travis.
Walter further shows his false pride when he flaunts his newfound sense of power when Mr.Lindner, one of the Younger’s soon-to-be neighbors, offers him an unjust deal. Now that Walter has control over the family 's money, he considers himself the head of the family and decision maker; this plays an important role towards how Walter treats others now that he holds himself to a higher standard. This theme applies to Walter when the chairman of the “welcoming committee” (115) named Mr.Lindner pays a visit to the family a couple weeks before they 're supposed to move into their new home in Clybourne Park. During this visit, Mr.Lindner makes the offer of the Clybourne Park community “buy[ing] the house from [them] at a financial gain to [the] family” (118). Mr.Lindner’s offer represents the racial oppression and how the white community looks down upon and doesn’t want African american people dirtying their communities.
Walter has often been portrayed as the antagonist, making multiple mistakes that hurts all members of the Younger family. However, through his faults, Walter has found a way to make a great transformation: from a person focused on materialistic values to a man worth respect. Walter’s primary goal of becoming a man is accomplished, but only after he realizes that being the man of the house is standing up for and protecting the house and people in it. This character growth communicates the conflict between a black man and society and how self-sufficiency and support must be found in his own house for him to be perceived as a man from society. Although many types of racial oppression and injustice have hindered Walter’s dream, his character teaches readers that social restrictions can be overcome by personal willpower and a support group.
Living in a two-bedroom apartment in the slums of Chicago is Walter, his mother (Lena), his wife Ruth, Beneatha (his sister), and his son Travis. Walter wants to do better by them by starting a liquor business using the insurance money his father gave his mother, but Mama, who is religious says it’s not Christian and “We ain’t no business people… We just plain working folks.” Then his wife, Ruth tells him she doesn’t want to hear about a dream he never pursues, and Beneatha tells Walter he’s crazy and that the money doesn’t belong to him. Especially since none of the family seems to listen or even support his idea he becomes bitter towards them.
Mama’s Plant and Sunlight In Lorraine Hansberry’s play “A Raisin in the Sun” Mama’s plant and sunlight are reoccurring symbols that represent growth, hope, and her pursuit of dreams through hardship. Through these symbols, Hansberry conveys the idea that just like plants need sunlight to thrive. People need a sense of hope of purpose to overcome the obstacles of life.