Raisin In The Sun Propaganda

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A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry begins with an alarm clocks waking up a black family that lives on the south side of Chicago, but what if the play would have been written about a white family or by a white author? As Clurman says in his article titled “Theatre”, “it would have done well to recover its investment” since the white actors would have attracted a richer population (Clurman 21). However the original play “received praises from all sides and the public is flocking to see it” (Clurman 21). A Raisin in the Sun was the first successful play about a black family to reach Broadway bringing with it a variety of audience members. It was a success because it was “something near to the conscience of a nation troubled by injustice to Negros” (Clurman 21). …show more content…

Hansberry conveyed the relatable struggles by using a black family “[sparing] us one of those well-scrubbed, light-skinned families who often appear in propaganda pieces about discrimination (Clurman 21). After Clurman identifies the benefit of Hansberry’s writing with vices and virtues he gives a quick summary of the play. The family is waiting for a ten thousand dollar check to arrive, and with that money Walter Lee, mammas son, wants to use the money to start a liquor store but momma, the head of the house, wants to use the money as a down payment for a house; the catch is that the house momma just bought is in a white neighborhood. At first, the idea is met with skepticism but then it is embraced when they decide to move. The money left over was meant to pay for Beneatha's school and help Walter start his liquor store, but that was all lost when Walter gave the money to a companion who takes the money and runs. The family longs to live the American dream and leave their rat-trap apartment just like other black families during their

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