Lorraine Hansberry's A Raisin In The Sun

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Cracked walls. Suffocating closets. Gloomy views. These comfortless characteristics showcase the hardships of the Younger’s setting. Living below the poverty line creates a struggle within home life and mental and physical relationships. In Lorraine Hansberry’s, A Raisin in the Sun, the Younger’s are an ambitious family who live in a tight, crumbling, and dreary apartment and have dreams that have been pushed aside for the sake of surviving in these rough conditions. Ruth, in A Raisin in the Sun, has dreams about continuing her life in a bigger house, Mama dreams about planting a garden in a bigger house, and Walter wants to open a liquor store; but these dreams are negatively faced by the conditions of the setting. In Gwendolyn Brooks’, kitchenette …show more content…

The speaker in the kitchenette building speaks about upholding dreams through symbolism, “Had time to warm it, keep it very clean” (Brooks 9). Just like a baby, a dream must be welcomed by people who are ready and can handle what they ask for. In order for a baby to grow and stay healthy, it must be well-kept and cared for. In a kitchenette building, raising a baby, or a dream, can be difficult because of the lack of space and resources. Consequently, Ruth is conscious of her position in life and loses hope in reaching her dream, and she proves Brooks’ ideas of the unattainability of dreams by shoving her dreams aside because it is hopeless. In Ruth’s apartment, she gives up hope on her dreams and cannot fulfill her dreams in a cramped kitchen and aged walls. This limits Ruth and creates more similarities between the speaker's ideas about dreams being unattainable if they are not maintained and can not thrive. Walter’s dream to open a liquor store is rooted in his desire to create a better life for his family, but living in poverty makes his dream far-fetched and difficult to maintain because of an overpowered need to

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