Lorraine Hansberry's A Raisin In The Sun

1037 Words5 Pages
Social status comes to mind, A Raisin in the Sun, the struggles that the Younger’s family shows how individuality can come together as one. The strength of each family members, including their weaknesses shows characters of how life is still remaining the same as today’s families. The struggle of generational conflict over ideas, woman’s role and about abortions still exist today. The ideal of being compared to what society call social can make one, insane. Anyone’s ideas about how life can because confusion, chaos, lost within themselves, yet happiness can be also be a mixture of mix feelings as well of how society should be. The struggles of life through this generation indifference about ideas, a woman’s role and what is best for them can…show more content…
Her strength and opinionated personality is quite before her time, the role of women, is not to be a set at home and being quiet. Her independence, drive to want to make a difference in the world has her best interest yet she neglects her own reality of what she truly wants. Her brother, Walter states, “Who the hell told you you had to be a doctor? If you so crazy ‘bout messing ‘round with sick people-then go be a nurse like the other women- or just get married and be quiet…” Basically he was saying to her is that follow the crowd of society. Be like the other women, become a nurse or shut your mouth as a wife. A lot of men today, generationally still think about women as the typically June Beaver, Leave it to Beaver sitcom, mother figure. One of her acquaintances, Joseph Asagai, Nigerian student, thinks highly of Beneatha. He had mentioned giving her an African name “Alaiyo”, which states, “One for whom bread-food- is not enough.” Her drive or hungry for more improvements of self is never satisfied. She learns that sometimes there are things forces you to or challenges a person’s strength, to see how bad they want to follow their dreams. Another society difference is the wife of Walter and sister-in-law of Beneatha,…show more content…
She work as laundress who had in particular ways of being woman. The mama had mention to her son, Walter, “When the world gets ugly enough- a woman will do anything for her family.” Ruth had found out that she is pregnant and knowing that the space that the family was living, a small place was going to leave a tough decision to make to have more room for another. So she was thinking about abortion. She thought at one point that it would be the best interest for the family. The generation between Mama and Ruth are similar yet different. Mama talks to Walter about Ruth having an abortion states, “And I’m waiting to hear you talk like him (his father) and say we a people who give children life, not who destroys them- say we done give up one baby to poverty and that we ain’t going to give up nary another one.” But at first Walter was not please about Ruth being pregnant, he states, “Cause we all tied up in a race of people that don’t know how to do nothing buy moan, pray and have babies!” He says this before he knew Ruth was even pregnant. That really puts her into a different, angry and disappointed state of mind. A lot of women, not all but those who does not have a strong support system does give into abortions. The mama came from an era that keeping a child was the best option, to leave your legacy and give the children an opportunity to change or brake the generations, generations of the
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