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A Raisin
in the Sun
152
pages; ISBN 0-679-75533-0
by Lorraine
Hansberry
|
Guide
Contents:
Note
to Teachers
Preparing to read
Comprehension
In-depth discussion
Expanding your knowledge
For
further reading
The 1959 Broadway
production of A Raisin in the Sun was a watershed in theatrical
history. At a time when there was perceived to be no black Broadway audience,
no commercial viability for a serious black play, and no significant "crossover"
white audience for a play about African Americans, the underdog Raisin
achieved the impossible: an all-out commercial and critical success. Indeed,
its theretofore unknown 29-year-old playwright won the Best Play of the
Year Award from the New York Drama Critics, the first black author and
only the fifth woman to do so.
In A Raisin
in the Sun, Lorraine Hansberry paints an impressive group portrait
of the Youngers, a family composed of powerful individuals who are yet
in many ways typical in their dreams and frustrations. There is Lena,
or Mama, the widowed mother; her daughter Beneatha, a medical student;
Beneatha's brother Walter, a struggling chauffeur; and Walter's wife,
Ruth, and their young son. Crammed together in an airless apartment,
the family dreams of better days. Walter longs unrealistically for riches
and resents being under his mother's thumb, while the intelligent and
idealistic Beneatha searches for her own identity and that of her race.
The family situation is brought to a crisis when Lena receives the first
real money they have ever had: $10,000, the insurance payment on her
husband's life. The family finally has the means to buy a house of their
own, but the dream proves difficult to achieve, as first Walter's rage
over a lifetime of thwarted dreams, then the hostility of their new
white neighbors, would seem to threaten the family's security and even
their self-respect.
In retrospect,
Lorraine Hansberry seems to have been astoundingly prescient in highlighting
the very issues that would soon leap into prominence in the '60s and
become central themes in the collective consciousness. Hansberry foresaw
what in effect turned out to be a revolution in racial, sexual, and
social thought: the reawakening of feminist thought after the conservative
'50s that inspired many women to make an active place for themselves
outside of the home; the surge of African American pride, the "black
is beautiful" ideal that would become so important in the '60s; the
increasingly confrontational scenes in the old battles over integration
and equality of opportunity.
While A Raisin
in the Sun is very much of its moment, it has also proven to be
for all time; its relevance to modern life, its perpetual popularity,
is attested to by the fact that it has continued over three and a half
decades to be given important and innovative new productions. It has
established itself as an American classic.
The questions, exercises,
and assignments that follow are designed to guide your students through
A Raisin in the Sun and aid them in understanding the play both
as a work of dramatic literature and as a provocative commentary on the
central challenges of middle-class life, not only for African Americans
but for families of every race. The questions are divided into sections
that test reader comprehension, indicate fruitful topics for in-class
discussion, and suggest directions in which students may go in their independent
writing and research assignments. Students should be encouraged to keep
journals while they read and to write down their questions and observations
as they read the play, paying attention to all the points of view presented
by the different characters; while many young people will identify with
Beneatha, others may find powerful sympathy with Walter, Asagai, Ruth,
or Mama. Though many changes have occurred since the play was written,
many of the social problems depicted in the play are still a part of our
world; students should therefore pay attention to contemporary news items,
noting in their journals those that deal with issues and themes raised
in A Raisin in the Sun.
- Why does the
author go to such lengths to describe the furnishings of the Younger
family's apartment? What do these furnishings and the state they are
in say about the family's lives?
- What does the
absence of light in the Youngers' apartment signify? Why does Ruth
so desperately hope for light in the new house?
- What is Walter
trying to say when he refers to African Americans as "the world's
most backward race of people" (p. 38)? Does he seriously believe this?
- What can you
deduce about the character of Walter and Beneatha's father, not only
from the way his family talks about him but from the character of
the family itself? What does his memory signify to each of the family
members?
- What sort of
hairstyles were normally worn by African American women in the 1950s?
Why does Asagai refer to such styles as "mutilation"? Just how bold
is Beneatha's gesture in cutting her hair? What kind of a statement
is she making to the outside world?
- Who has Ruth
actually gone to see instead of the doctor? Why does she consider
taking this route?
- What does Beneatha
mean by the term "assimilationist"? Can you think of other words or
phrases meaning the same thing? Why does she condemn blues music as
being assimilationist?
- Asagai tells
Beneatha that "between a man and a woman there need be only one kind
of feeling" (63). Can you explain what he means and why, for Beneatha,
this feeling alone is not enough?
- Mama tells Walter
that something is eating him up, something that has to do with more
than just money. What do you think this is?
- Mama says to
Walter, "You ain't satisfied or proud of nothing we done. I mean that
you had a home..., that you don't have to ride to work on the back
of nobody's streetcar" (74). Is Walter's life indeed likely to have
been better, from a material and political point of view, than his
parents' was?
- What African
name has Asagai given Beneatha, and what does it mean? Why is Beneatha
satisfied when Asagai translates it for her?
- In Act II, Scene
One, what emotion is Walter expressing when he shouts "Ethiopia stretch
forth her hands again!" (77) and "The lion is waking" (78)? Who was
Jomo Kenyatta?
- What does the
Youngers' new house signify to Ruth? To Mama? Why does Walter so strongly
resist the idea of moving?
- What does Asagai
expect from a woman? What does George expect from a woman? Would either
of them be satisfied with Beneatha? Could she be happy with either
of them?
- How does Mrs.
Johnson's idea of God differ from Mama's?
- What does Mrs.
Johnson mean when she speaks of the "colored people that was bombed
out their place" (100)? Who set off the bomb? Why does she mention
this event to the Youngers?
- Why does Mrs.
Johnson say that the Youngers are proud? Does she mean it as a compliment?
Are they, in fact, proud? How does pride help, or hinder, them in
their progress through life?
- Why does Mama
say that Booker T. Washington is a fool? Do you agree with her?
- Can you explain
what Beneatha means when she says that "there are two things we, as
a people, have got to overcome, one is the Ku Klux Klan—and the other
is Mrs. Johnson" (104)?
- What are Walter's
fantasies after Mama gives him charge of the money? Why are they so
obviously unrealistic, even destructive?
- Does Walter's
failed investment confirm Mama's belief that the Youngers are not
businessmen but plain working folks?
- What does Walter
mean when he refers to his sister as a "New Negro" (112)? And why
does she call him and Ruth "old-fashioned Negroes"?
- How does Lindner
use language to make his proposal to the Youngers sound almost like
a reasonable one? Is it true that "a man, right or wrong, has the
right to want to have the neighborhood he lives in a certain kind
of way" (117)? Is a "right" actually a right when it infringes on
the rights or ignores the humanity of others?
- Why is Mama's
little plant so important to her? What does she mean when she says
"It expresses ME" (121)?
- Why does Beneatha's
belief in the importance of doctors and medicine change after Walter
loses the family's money?
- Why is Asagai
able to identify himself so intensely with the future of his country,
however it may go? Why is Beneatha, at least temporarily, unable to
do so?
- After he has
been robbed, Walter says that life is divided "between the takers
and the 'tooken'" (141). Do the final events of the play prove him
wrong? If so, how?
- What does it
mean, to Walter, to be a "Man"?
- Lorraine Hansberry
prefaces her play with a poem by Langston Hughes. How does the play
illustrate the theme of the poem? In what way is the concept of the
"dream" central to the play? Which characters specifically discuss
their dreams? What is Mama's dream in life? Ruth's? Walter's? Do dreams
ever become destructive, a substitute for action? Or is it absolutely
essential to keep a dream alive?
- In the first
scene, Travis experiences "anger" and "frustration" (29). Is it implied
here that such feelings will inevitably be his lot in life, as an
African American man? If so, does this implication change over the
course of the play?
- In the fifties,
it was extremely ambitious for a young black woman to set out to become
a doctor. What does it say about Beneatha that she is determined to
pursue this career? What does it say about Mama's character that she
is entirely supportive of her daughter's choice? Is it natural that
Walter should be resentful? How do Beneatha's two boyfriends, Asagai
and George, really feel about her ambitions?
- George angers
the Youngers with his cynical attitude and his mockery of Beneatha's
veneration for "our Great West African Heritage." But is George presented
as an entirely unsympathetic character? Is it possible to find anything
sensible or realistic in his point of view?
- Except for Asagai,
none of the characters in the play has been to Africa. What do Africa
and Africanness signify to each character?
- What does Mama
mean when she says "We ain't no business people, Ruth. We just plain
working folks" (42)? Do you believe that she is correct, or is her
attitude defeatist? Does Ruth, in her heart of hearts, believe her?
What would Beneatha's response be to this statement?
- Beneatha declares
that she is searching for her "identity." In what does her search
consist? Does she find it, at the end of the play?
- What does Walter
mean when he says money is "life" (74)? Considering what his life
has been, is he justified in saying this? Is it simply lack of money
that has deprived Walter of so many important things—his sense of
manhood, of pride, his love of family? Why, in your opinion, is the
Youngers' poverty so much harder on Walter than on the rest of the
family?
- "That is just
what is wrong with the colored woman in this world," Walter says to
Ruth; "Don't understand about building their men up and making 'em
feel like they somebody." Do you feel that Ruth has not been sufficiently
supportive to Walter? That she has failed him in some way (84)?
- For budget reasons,
the character of Mrs. Johnson was cut in the original production of
the play. Do you feel that the scene is essential to the play? If
so, why? If not, why not? What does the scene tell us about the world
in which the Youngers live?
- In his introduction,
Robert Nemiroff says that some audience members have perceived Mama
as "conservative," an "upholder of the social order." What do you
think about this proposition? Doesn't it depend on one's definition
of "conservative"? Can you come up with a good definition?
- Is God a real
presence to any of the characters besides Mama? Does Mama's religion
give her strength, or is the strength already in her character? Does
Beneatha's rejection of her mother's God make her stronger, or more
vulnerable?
- Many of the problems
the Youngers must confront are specific to the African American family;
others are problems that every family, black or white, must deal with.
What in the play do you see as specifically African American, and
what is universal?
- Through most
of the play, Walter is shown in a state of arrested development, still
very much like a teenager. Do you feel, as Mama comes to, that because
for many years she refused to cede the position of head of the family
to him, she is to blame for the deficiencies in his character?
- Though three
of them work as servants, Mama and her family believe that "being
any kind of a servant wasn't a fit thing for a man to have to be"
(103). This belief goes against one that, because of Booker T. Washington's
influence, had value in the black community at that time: that all
labor was possessed of dignity. Do you side with Mama on this issue,
or with Washington? What are your reasons? Is this purely a racial
matter, or is it a problem which all races must solve?
- Asagai sees "what
the New World hath finally wrought" in Beneatha—but Beneatha, with
a darker vision, sees it in Walter. In what way are they both right?
How has American society, with its strengths and weaknesses, shaped
both Beneatha and Walter?
- In answer to
someone who thought the play's ending was a happy one, Lorraine Hansberry
retorted: "I invite him to come live in one of the communities where
the Youngers are going!" (11) But cannot the ending, in some measure,
be seen as happy? Or at least as promising hope, or greater strength
for the Youngers as a family?
- The continuing
popularity of A Raisin in the Sun would seem to imply that
the play is as relevant to contemporary audiences as it was when it
first appeared. Is this your opinion? Which issues addressed in the
play are still immediate, and which are inscribed within a historical
moment that is over? Has life for African Americans gotten better
or worse since the play was written? In what ways?
- A Raisin in
the Sun takes place in 1959. The Younger family had no way of
predicting the many changes that would occur in American society in
the '60s, '70s, and '80s. Try to imagine what might have happened
to the Youngers in the years following the action of the play. Did
Beneatha become a doctor? Did she get married? Have Walter and Ruth
succeeded in their reconciliation? What sort of life and career has
Travis had? How has each family member responded to the challenges
of life in the 1990s? Write a few paragraphs telling what, in your
opinion, might have happened to all the members of the Younger family.
- Neighborhood
integration, like school integration, has proven to be a long and
painful process; there are still incidents of backlash against it
today. Research the history of integration. Have the violent incidents
escalated, or have they lessened? Has the integration process ultimately
been successful, or has it been a failure, simply confirming the grim
reality of the ghetto?
- Mama criticizes
Walter for not appreciating the improved opportunities that African
Americans had recently built for themselves. Read about the "Jim Crow,"
or segregation, laws that operated for many decades. What changes
had already occurred in these laws during Walter's lifetime? In what
ways had life for African Americans altered since World War II? Did
new rights bring new problems in their wake?
- In the 1950s
and '60s, politically alert African Americans like Beneatha found
an inspirational example in Africa, where one country after another
was throwing off colonial rule and achieving independence. Among the
heroes of this period were Jomo Kenyatta of Kenya, who instigated
the Mau Mau uprising, and Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt, who humiliated
the British and French in the 1956 Suez crisis. Read about this period
of decolonization and independence. How do these events, taking place
on a faraway continent, affect the Youngers' self-awareness and their
outlook on life?
- The conflict
between "assimilationists" and "New Negroes" mentioned in the play
was of specific concern at that time: activists like Malcolm X and
Marcus Garvey, who espoused black separatism, fought against the more
conservative ethos of racial uplift, humility, and hard work. But
this was not simply an issue for the '50s; the debate continues to
be an active one. Read the newspapers for two or three weeks, paying
special attention to racial issues. How many news items and editorials
can you find that address questions of separatism and assimilation?
The idea of the American "melting pot" was one to which almost everyone
paid lip service in the '50s; is it still accepted?
- Beneatha expresses
several concerns that would soon be voiced by the women's movement
that blossomed in the '60s and '70s. What were some of the changes
feminists of that period hoped to make in their society? Which of
these changes have been achieved, and which have not? What does Beneatha,
as a woman, want from society and from a husband? In what ways do
her ambitions and needs differ from those of her mother? Of Ruth?
Do you think that Beneatha would find her life easier or more fulfilling
in the 1990s?
James Baldwin: The
Fire Next Time, Nobody Knows My Name, Notes of a Native
Son; Robert Coles: Children of Crisis, Volume I: A Study
of Courage and Fear; Lorraine Hansberry, Les Blancs: The Collected
Last Plays, The Movement, The Sign in Sidney Brustein's
Window, To Be Young, Gifted and Black; Jomo Kenyatta: Facing
Mount Kenya; Martin Luther King, Jr.: Why We Can't Wait; Studs
Terkel: Race: How Blacks & Whites Think & Feel About the American Obsession;
C. Vann Woodward, The Strange Career of Jim Crow
This teacher's
guide was written by Brooke Allen. Brooke Allen has a Ph.D. in literature
from Columbia University, and has spent several years in France as a
teacher and a journalist. She writes regularly on books for The New
Criterion, The Wall Street Journal, and other publications.
Copyright ©
1995 by VINTAGE BOOKS
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