A Raisin in the Sun
demonstrates the struggle of black minority groups through its skillful
depiction of family relationships in the first act.
First of all, I find it significant that Hansberry set the
time period for her novel as anytime between “World War II and the present”
because it demonstrates the everlasting nature of the struggle for
equality. I also connected this time
frame to “The Aesthetics of Segregation, Black Liberation” literary criticism. This article states that Hansberry did “not
offer desegregation as the ultimate answer to segregation, but rather as a
necessary step” toward achieving equality for all of mankind (222). The time frame adds to the notion that the
fight for equality is ongoing by allowing readers in the “present” to take ownership
of the problems presented in the play and apply them to their own lives.
Secondly, I thought that the characterization of the items
in the house as “tired” not only emphasized Ruth’s weariness but also served to
represent the exhausted lives of the black community as a whole. In the 1950s, it was very difficult for
people of color to attain white-collar jobs.
The majority of black women worked as maids or nannies for wealthy white
families, and most black men worked in factories or held other blue-collar
jobs. These jobs offered little
emotional reward, and there was little opportunity for advancement. As a result, blacks were kept in an
inescapable state of poverty and inferiority to whites. This position in society took an emotional
and physical toll on minorities. In
fact, the “American negro had a life expectancy of five to ten years less than the
average white” (To Be Young 177). The adverse effects on the emotional and
physical well-being of blacks in an oppressive society is represented in
Hansberry’s personification of the Lee’s house as “tired”.
And finally, I found Walter’s rant about Ruth not supporting
his dream very ironic. He accusingly
asserts that Ruth doesn’t understand her spousal duty to “making’em feel like
[he] somebody” because she reasonably refuses to blindly support his dream of
opening a liquor store. Walter says that
she suppresses his hope by indifferently offering him eggs without listening to
him. However, despite Walter’s whiney
complaints that he is the one being oppressed, as a black woman, Ruth is
ultimately the inferior partner in the relationship and therefore could never oppress
him. In fact, Walter repeatedly
emotionally mistreats Ruth by referring to her as a “colored woman”(27) in a derogatory
fashion. Through this dynamic, Hansberry demonstrates the marital issues that develop as a result of a twisted and harmful society.
Great post! I wasn't aware that the time frame was from WWII to present, but your analysis is definitely sound and intriguing! I also like how you point out the irony in Walter's complaints of oppression. Nicely done!
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