Walter Lee and Willy Loman are doing this because the whole family wants to do something good. They are trying to send their children life that they have never had before. Willy Loman is a salesman who traveled to the end because he crashed several times. When Willie ceased traveling, he decided to find a job in town. Before he started working, his condition worsened over time. When Willy went to meet his new boss, he was happy to start a new job, but then he got bad news.
"Raisins under the sun" refers to all their dreams. All their dreams begin with delicious and juicy grapes. However, it will be depleted as it is placed under the sun for a long time and abandoned. It will be depleted when dreams are pushed to reality or put on hold for a long time. "Like a raisin under the sun" is likewise the first use of simile. Between the 1950s and the 1960s, the Youngor family lived in the southern part of Chicago. They live in poor areas of the black community. They did not receive any direct discrimination as their own race surrounded them. The fact that they live in poor urban areas helps them work hard to get out of the problem. Because they do not want to live in such harsh environments, they want to realize their dream of leaving. Their economic situation and ethnic situation brought more obstacles to their way of improving their lives and the future. Young families have to work hard to earn money, find their identity, and cope with discrimination
The rain of the sun, Lorraine Hansbury's "sun rain" shows an eternal struggle to promote family values and morals in a very clear way. The drama tells the story of a small black family struggling to keep alive their dreams from tenants and owners. These dreams, the struggles necessary to achieve them, and the unfilled agreement with dreams are the focus and dynamism behind the story of everyone struggling to achieve their goals . This allowed African Americans to acclimatize and give something they wanted to society by changing their way of speaking and appearance. The second act, the sunny scene, Lorraine Hansberry explained the concept of George's behavior and cultural assimilation, and carelessly interrupted Benetta and Walter's "African" performance.