Lorraine Hansberry's A Raisin In The Sun

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From time there sprouts love, and from love there sprouts families; however, love does not blockade the generational differences that occur throughout family lineage. American playwright Lorraine Hansberry—receiver of the New York Drama Critics’ Circle Award and author of A Raisin in the Sun—writes a dramatic story following Walter Lee Younger Jr., a Black man, and his family living in Southside Chicago in the 1950s. In an era of racial and gender injustice, the narrative delves into the family’s lives while waiting for Walter Sr.’s life insurance check. Inevitably, conflicts rise within the varying age groups in the family, escalating into intense discord. In Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun, the clash of generations in the Younger …show more content…

The main plot point that propels A Raisin in the Sun forward is Walter’s dream of owning a liquor store and utilizing the $10,000 dollar cheque coming from his father’s life insurance. Consequently, Walter’s desperation for investing in a liquor store becomes his main value and motive to the point where he believes that money is life—without it, he cannot do anything. Unlike her son, Mama’s principle values and generational contrast shine as she snaps back at Walter for believing as such in Act 1 Scene 2, bemoaning, “You something new, boy. In my time we were worried about not being lynched and getting to the North if we could and how to stay alive and still have a pinch of dignity too.” (Hansberry 74). Even though Walter has been put through a fair share of tough experiences due to either finance or race, it is clear the ghastly difference between Mama’s search for freedom—a human right—and Walter’s. Mama cannot help but reprimand Walter for the drastic comparisons of the life or death exposure she was put through and Walter’s, potentially in Mama’s eyes, less significant and greedy

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