What Does A Raisin In The Sun Represent Mama's American Dream

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In the play, A Raisin in the Sun, by Lorraine Hansberry, each character has his or her own version of the American Dream. The Youngers are an African American family of five living in a tiny apartment on the Southside of Chicago together. Mama is the head of the household and is usually the final consent before decisions are made. Mama's American Dream is to be able to provide a better life for her immediate and future generations of the Younger family. Hansberry represents Mama's American Dream through Walter Sr.'s life insurance check, her plant, and the new house she is looking to buy for the family in Clybourne Park. Walter Sr.'s life insurance check is one of the ways Lorraine Hansberry represents Mama's American Dream. Having $10,000 will dramatically change the Younger's life. They will finally have money to spend on necessities such as, extra food and new furnishings in their little apartment. Their budget will not be so tight, and they will have some money to spend …show more content…

The house is a symbol of a better future for the Younger family. Mama describes the house as, "...a nice house too …Three bedrooms—nice big one for you and Ruth.… Me and Beneatha still have to share our room, but Travis have one of his own—and (With difficulty) I figure if the—new baby—is a boy, we could get one of them double-decker outfits … And there’s a yard with a little patch of dirt where I could maybe get to grow me a few flowers … And a nice big basement …" (Hansberry 65) The new house is a major improvement upon the Younger's previous house, if you could even call it that. They have lived in a tiny one room apartment for the longest time and see the new residence as a turning point towards an easier life. Mama's American Dream is represented by the new home because it is symbolic of a shift in the family's determination to elevate their level of economic

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