Lena, Walter, Ruth, and Beneatha Younger all live under the same roof, but their dreams are different. As a family owner, Lena dreams about her children's dreams and makes every effort to make these dreams come true. Lena's eldest son, Walter, put it in a liquor store planning to invest his dream with his mother's money. On the other hand, Beneatha wants to become a doctor after graduating from college and Walter's wife Ruth want to become rich. "Raisin in the Sun" is a book about "delaying dreams". In this book, Lorraine Hansberry fluently explains the dream of the Young family and his dream.
It's her dreams; they are very simple and simple, but they are also beautiful. She wants everyone to be happy and be surprised at what she did with a check.
When Walter heard that the mother paid insurance at home, Benetta thought that it was not fair to earn some money for her medical department, and he thought he did not do anything for his alcohol business, I was disappointed. Lina always wants to hand over the remaining insurance to Walter so his son is happy and reliable. Walter took money in his hand, thanked his mother, and thanked her for her trust in him. Then Walter handed money to his partner to help him gain a liquor licensure but did not notice that they betrayed him. When his dreams collapsed, Walter regretted that he did not listen to his mother, his wife and his sister.
When her husband was very hopeless, Walter 's wife Ruth was pregnant. Walter lost money and her dream, but Ruth forgive him and encouraged him to start everything. Ruth, her dreams are rich and have a wonderful family He is quietly accepting the fact that her dream is just a dream. For her this is comfort and her husband returned to reality after his failing dream.
As in this article, the dream of Lorraine Hansberry to delay the rain under the sun is a dream that was postponed once more. But sometimes unlike a dream, this article will be satisfied and complete. His dream is not explained directly, but all characters from A Raisin in the sun have a delayed dream even for the small Travis. Their dreams are as dry as the raisins under the sun. However, the dream was exhausted, and the marriage of Walter Lee and Ruth was also exhausted. - Lorraine Hans Berry 's American dream "Lorraine Hans Berry sun raisin" in the sun' raisin 'is about living in' American dream '. Hansbury wrote her story in 1959. The "American dream" she said is quite different from the existing "American dream". In 1959, my dream was to work hard and to live a comfortable life. Americans believe that you can have a good life as long as you have a family and are eating at the table. Let's fast forward in 2003
Dignity and America's Dream America's dream of raining in the sun is different from each one of us, but we are all anxious to achieve that. At Lorraine · Hansberry's play "Raisin in the Sun", all members of Youngor want the opportunity to realize America's dream. American dream for young families is to have a house, otherwise, for Walter Youngor it should be accepted by the white society. - "Do you want to check it today?" The life insurance checks that Mama is trying to receive is the source of all Youngor family dreams. One of the main arguments Lorraine Hansberry played in her play "raisin in the sun" was the importance of dreams. Dreams are being promoted by all members of the Youngor family. Mama wants to have his house in a nice place in the town, but children do not want to grow up with a mouse.
Lorraine Hansberry's "raisin in the sun" is a script about dealing with apartheid, victory, and personal tragedies. Raisins under the sun in the southern area of Chicago are focused on personal dreams and personal achievement of young families. Youngor is an African-American family surrounded by poverty, personal desire, and the ultimate battle against racial discrimination against hatred. Mother Lena Youngor is the hero of this story, the oldest Youngor. - "What happened to the delay in my dream?" Langston Hughes wrote as "postponement of a dream" in the poem of 1959, but "Dry like a raisin under the sun" or "rotten meat At the end of the poem, Hughes made another choice, they ask, "Does it explode?" This is a poet by Lorraine Hansberry who plays a raisin in a solar drama. The play is about African-American families who are working hard to get rid of poverty.