How Does A Raisin In The Sun Relate To Walter's Dream

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Shackled by poverty and prejudice, Walter Lee Younger, from the play A Raisin in the Sun, is obsessed with a business idea that he believes will solve all of his economic and social problems. Walter’s business idea of co-owning a liquor store provides him with the hope and dream of a better future. The poems “Let America Be America Again” and “I, Too” by Langston Hughes, along with a motown classic song by Aretha Franklin from the civil rights era, perfectly describe Walter Younger’s passion for money, desperation for respect, and ambition for a better life in Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun. The poem “Let America Be America Again” relates perfectly to Walter and his passion for money and success in A Raisin in the Sun because of his dreams and aspirations. Walter’s desire to be wealthy controls his life and it is all …show more content…

In Act 1, Walter mentions the following to Mama: “Sometimes when I’m downtown and I pass them cool-quiet-looking restaurants where them white boys are sitting back and talking ‘bout things...sitting there turning deals worth millions of dollars...” (Hansberry 74). Walter is jealous of businessmen who can afford a high standard of living, and he wants that luxurious life for himself. Continuing on, Walter adds, “Just tell me where you want to go to school and you’ll go. Just tell me, what it is you want to be – and you’ll be it...son...and I will hand you the world!” (Hansberry 109). Walter’s conversation with his son further describes his passion for money. Walter has a strong desire to have limitless amounts of cash so that he may hand his son, Travis, “the world.” The previous two snippets of the story from Walter connect to ideas from the poem “Let America Be America Again,” by Langston Hughes. Like Walter’s passion for money and riches, the poem has a lyric which states “Of profit, power, gain, of grab the land!/ Of grab the gold! Of grab the ways of

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