A perfect family In the 1950s, families were considered almost perfect and people were looking for "perfect family". The situation has changed in 20 years, but people are still thinking about the model family. According to Coontz's "Marriage at the time", many relationships are influenced by deep marriage proposals, failing marriages will be more than merely successful marriages (12). Marriage in the 1950s may be more stable, but divorce is increasing today, marriage promotes the development of the marriage industry.
The emergence of television in the 1950s brought a wonderful family that appears in American families every day. After the 11th World War, even though the baby-boomer generation was not from Beaver, we suddenly understood whether the 4 family is natural or desirable. Why are my imaginable images of working fathers and mothers at home? Then the war in Vietnam entered the living room of a young American and mobilized one generation. In the 6 o'clock news, it is no longer "in a certain place", the reality of shocking fighting was televised and shocked the group of people who had never seen a war, but the 11 th world Shadow of the great war, deeply influence the baby-boomer generation with a thorough anti-war movement, united
In the 1950s Americans had dreamed of having a garden, a big cart, and a happy family. All careers emigrate to America, access to education and economic opportunities, and dreams of religious and political freedom. However, as it has just been released, this is not that simple for African Americans. - Lorraine-Hansberry's play "Raisin in the Sun" is a realistic drama that develops around the economic and social struggle of American black families against prejudice in Chicago in the 1950s. The colorful character of the young people caused many conflicts and pain in their small and unhappy apartments.
Lorriane Hansberry wrote "The Sun's Raisins" in the late 1950's. Hans Berry picked a very poor working-class black family in the late 1950s and emphasized the important role of dreams as the driving force of people's lives in the context of the southern area of Chicago. Desperation after overcoming poverty. In the late 1950s, the Youngor family was a typical representative of most black families in southern USA. Youngor Apartments are the only theaters to emphasize the status of residential areas. Most people are descendants of free slaves who live in the slums, have no land ownership, little or no education, and are still subject to extreme prejudice, racial discrimination and humiliation by most Caucasians.