When reading "raisins in the sun", I am looking forward to a different outcome than the actual conclusion. From the beginning, I thought that only one character would spend money to fund his dreams and the rest only needed to deal with the disappointment they missed. Compared to my expectation, I can say that the conclusion of the theater is satisfactory with confidence. Some of the dreams of the original people who dreamed that Walter would open a liquor store were not met, but it seems that they achieved a bigger dream through the script.
Raisins Happy End Under the Sun Raisins under the sun are about families and black families with economic difficulties. At the end of the story, the head of the Walter family took over control and refused to request one to become one of the family, asking for white businessman to stay away from the white community and be with all the black people. This proposal got fed up with young families and hurt their black pride. I think that it is suitable for happening, so I would like to continue this story with my own words. The three changes I have to do are that Walter had to act against apartheid, that my grandmother died and how blacks were accepted and enjoyed being blacks is.
Raisins under the sun are in raisins under the sun, and father's life insurance also contributed to this behavior. Walter Youngor worked hard for his family, an African-American who lives in southern Chicago. The game starts instead of finishing with insurance. Raisin also has a surviving wife, Lena, and two adult children, Beneatha and Walter Lee. Every young person has a dream, a way to transfer himself from the edge to the American Cultural Center. Walter Lee wants to be a businessman; Benesa wants to be a doctor; Lena wants to turn it into a homeowner, a man with his garden and garden. Everyone wants to use insurance money to realize their dreams. Lena decided to compromise. She spent some money to pay down on a white suburban house, but Waltery left enough money to buy his alcohol shop and Benata to go to medical school.
Since World War II, Hansbury's sun's creativity rain has played an important role in the development of African American drama. "Raisin in the sun" is the first work by African-American writers, broadcast on Broadway, and received high praise from New York drama critics. "The play of raisins under the sun" (1959) brought Hans Berry to the New York Critics Awards, and it became the best show of the year. Under the sun raisins raises the lives of ordinary African-American families