Lorraine Hansberry's A Rasin In The Sun

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The play A Rasin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry Walter changes from being selfish, greedy, and desperate for control, to being mature, the decision maker and he puts his family first. Walters's greed damaged many of his relationships, his relationships with his mother, sister, and wife were the main ones that were damaged. The ending of the play was a fresh start for him, and through the play he got the growth he so desperately needed. Character development is not often linear, and this story proves that. Is abandoning your dreams for your family a self-betrayal or an action of maturity?I think that Walter in the beginning of the play was desperate for control. He wants to be the head of the family. In the text it states "WALTER You ain’t …show more content…

He desperately wants Mama to see him as the man of the family who makes final decisions for the family. He believes he should decide how the check is used. In the final scene Walter decides to refuse the offer and moves into the new house because he wants to show the man that their family is resilient and determined. In the text it states "WALTER And we have decided to move into our house because my father—my father—he earned it for us brick by brick. MAMA has her eyes closed and is rocking back and forth as though she were in church, with her head nodding the Amen. Yes. We don’t want to make no trouble for nobody or fight no cause, and we will try to be good neighbors. And that’s all we have to say about that. He looks the man in the eyes, we don’t want your money. (He turns and walks away)" (Walter and Mama, Final Scene, line 147). In this scene, Walter refuses money from Mr. Linder, who is offering to buy their house because the neighborhood does not want black people living in it. This shows how he matures and goes from desperately wanting control to gaining it. He puts his family before money for the first time in the

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