A Raisin In The Sun Research Paper

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When at home, nobody should ever feel as though they are restrained by their walls and left no room to grow. In Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun, the Younger family displays the harsh reality many Black Americans faced during the 1950s. The Youngers are a Black American family which consists of Beneatha, Walter Lee, Lena, Ruth, and Travis. They live in a Southside Chicago apartment with a kitchen, multipurpose living room, two bedrooms, and one window. They also share a bathroom in the hall with the others that reside on their floor. The play begins on a Friday morning and the family is shown to care for one another but also display a disconnect through their interactions. During the following weeks, the Youngers expressed their dreams …show more content…

Black Americans face violence and are cut off from buying homes in White neighborhoods, forcing them into separate communities despite the abolishment of Jim Crow laws in the north. One scholar states, “...the country was polarized by a tradition of racial segregation, with daily struggles against the “separate but equal” doctrine that was established by the US Supreme Court...” (“A Raisin in the Sun” 129) illuminating the issue of segregation present throughout the 1950s that many relentlessly fought against. Another scholar further elaborates, “The major “formal” means of maintaining residential segregation were restrictive covenants preventing property from being sold or rented to Blacks” (“Cultural” 1550) which emphasizes further attempts by White Americans to maintain segregation in their communities. Moreover, in Hansberry’s play Karl Linder models the White American mindset when he states, “It is a matter of the people of Clybourne Park believing, rightly or wrongly, as I say, that for the happiness of all concerned that our Negro families are happier when they live in their own communities” (Hansberry II.3.1602). Linder’s remark to the Youngers when trying to buy them out illustrates the attempts of White Americans to maintain segregation during the

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