Saturday, October 12, 2019
Lorraine Hansberrys A Raisin In The Sun - Dreams Essay -- English L
A Raisin in the Sun - Dreams    Dreams    The play A Raisin in the Sun demonstrates the hardships and successes  of the members of a black family living in the south side of Chicago  during the 50ââ¬â¢s. For the Youngers, dreams are life. They are what  bring the family together and pull it apart throughout the play. Each  member of the family has a particular dream, and each of those dreams  is like a wall being built between its owner and various other members  of the family. Everyoneââ¬â¢s dream straddles the line between selfishness  and goodness for the family; however, some, like Walterââ¬â¢s, seem to be  pulled more by the gravity of selfishness. Both Mama and Ruth share  the same dream, but each has a slightly different reason for her  preference.    Walterââ¬â¢s dream is the most apparent from the beginning of the play,  and he presses his family and himself until he accomplishes his goal.  Walter focuses so much on his dream, however, that he leaves no room  for his family. One may ask, why is he so intent on his dream? Walter  is out to prove something to himself, to his family, and to the world.  He needs to show people that he is a man and is responsible. No one  ever trusted Walter with anything important as can be seen when he  says, ââ¬Å"Ainââ¬â¢t nobody with me! Not even my own mother!â⬠ (Hansberry, 85).  In all of his life, Walter was not allowed to grow into a man and bear  the responsibility of his life and the lives of his family. Mama has  always been the head of the family, and Walter never got the chance in  his childhood to take responsibility with less important matters;  therefore, when he is handed a check for $6500, Walter does what he  never had the chance to do before. Walterââ¬â¢s father was a proud man who  wanted his family t...              ...s possessions in the minds of many people. They can  tear apart a family like the Youngers, or they can grasp and control a  mind like that of Walter. However, dreams are items not easily left  behind, and if they were, what would become of the people who owned  them? Dreams make up a part of the life of humans that without, who  can say where life may lead a person. Probably nowhere. For without  dreams, a human has no ambitions and no desire to make any impact upon  the world. Without dreams the human race would be one of idle  creatures that desire nothing more than to be like the cockroaches in  this play, searching only for the necessities of life between periods  of sleep. Maybe that would be better, though, for someone like Walter;  after all, what has he done but be a burden upon society? Or will he  someday succeed because of a dream, if only through his son?                      
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