Lorraine Hansberry's A Raisin In The Sun Essay

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Lorraine Hansberry epitomizes A Raisin in the Sun’s characters to Langston Hughes’s Harlem by paralleling each of the characters’ dreams to the lines in the poem, conveying the struggles of African Americans at the time. At the main focus of Hansberry’s play is Walter’s struggle to attain his dream of being a successful business owner. Yet, when Walter discovers that the hope for his dream has disappeared along with the stolen insurance money, he is forced to cope with the realization that his dream has been taken away. In the beginning of Act 3, he reluctantly acts out, “‘Captain, Mistuh, Bossman.. Just gi’ ussen de money, fo’ God’s sake, and we’s-we’s ain’t gwine come out deh and dirty up yo’ white folks neighborhood...’ (He breaks down completely) And [states] I’ll feel fine! …show more content…

I am a snobber! FINE!” (Hansberry 144). Walter presumes that his only option is to go to Mr. Lindner and accept his offer to make his dream come true, even though it goes against his will; he depicts to his family what he will do when Mr. Lindner comes. Furthermore, Hansberry conveys that Walter’s deferred dream got so unhealthy that “it just sags/like a heavy load/ [which eventually] explode[d]” (Hughes 9-11). Hughes is expressing that a dream that has no hope will eventually lead the person to breakdown. Therefore, Walter exploded because of his load of guilt and frustration caused by him being blinded by his dream of losing his family’s money. Even though Mama’s dream of having a garden of her own is not as central a focus in the text, she also has to deal with the repercussions of it being cast aside. For example, in Act 1, Mama longingly reminisced “I always wanted a garden. This plant is the closest I ever got to having one.” (Hansberry 53). Mama wants to have a garden, but because of her current situation she made the best of what she

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