Essay On Hansberry's A Raisin In The Sun

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We’ve all been told to “dream big” and “follow our hearts” countless times. Have you ever wondered about the possible outcomes of doing so? What if you put them off for too long? A Raisin in the Sun by Lauren Hansberry is a play about a less fortunate black family in Chicago after World War II. The family members each have their dreams and encounter obstacles like racism, poverty, sexism, etc. Hansberry was inspired by “Harlem” by Langston Hughes, a poem that ponders the endings of deferred dreams and was written during the era of the Harlem Renaissance. The dreams of various characters in A Raisin in the Sun are deferred in ways applicable to lines from “Harlem”, ranging from “crust[ing] and sugar[ing] over like a syrupy sweet” to “stink[ing] …show more content…

Hansberry 117-118. Lindnor does not believe he is a racist, but his racially motivated explanation to the Youngers of redlining and why colored people should live in “their own communities” says otherwise. He says that their community is full of hardworking and honest people, implying that colored families do not share those traits, but it is repeatedly stated throughout the book that Walter’s father worked very hard for his money. At the end of the book, Walter remarks, “And we have decided to move into our house because my father-my father- earned it for us brick by brick.” (Hansberry 148). Lindnor’s old-fashioned dream will stink like rotten meat because his views expire as the country progresses and the Youngers move into a white neighborhood. A Raisin in the Sun shows that a dream deferred can dry up over time, expire as new ideas form, end in a messy burst of emotions, come true sweetly, or even be reborn into a new

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