For example, one way she is paying for the house is with Big Walter’s insurance money, but she only makes a down payment. She feels as if the house will help her family because she sees how they are beginning to fall apart. In addition, Ruth helps Mama when she encourages her to buy a house because there will be more space. She feels jubilant because there will be space for the baby, which means she no longer has to have an abortion. Another way Ruth expresses triumphant is when she says, “HALLELUJAH! AND GOODBYE MISERY…” (Hansberry 93). This shows how much she appreciates Mama’s decision, so they can finally leave this “rat-trap” of a house. As a result, the Younger family do end up moving to Clybourne Park after a crisis that almost stops them from doing so. Walter does the right thing by telling Linder, “My father- he earned it for us brick by brick” (Hansberry 148), which means they will move because his father works himself to death just so they can get this house. At the end, Mama thinks moving once again became a good idea when Walter finally came to his senses and appreciates the house. To conclude, Mama achieves a dream that impacts the rest of the Younger…
Mothers are very important to every living person on this earth. They nurture, educate, and enthrall pupils from birth well into their adult life. According to many psychologists, women are born with nurturing tendencies that are used throughout the rest of our lives. Regardless of monetary and social status, a mother is someone caring and loving. In both ROOM and The Glass Castle, the mothers are nurturing and loving regardless of both above statuses. They also share resilience, creativity, and a dependency on others that can be at times overwhelming.…
The demand for Beneatha to accept the God which Mama believes in regardless of her own personal views further highlights Mama’s traditional values and her lack of willingness to change them. This allows for Hansberry to show that Mama is not a progressive character which, particularly in the context of when the play was written, was done purposefully to portray Mama as the ‘Mammy’, archetype. Mama is therefore seen as an elderly woman, stuck in old traditions and bound by her past, showing that in ‘A Raisin in the Sun’; stereotypes are fleshed out rather than…
Even from the initial scenes of the play, one can sense the dignity Mama upholds herself with, and the fact that Walter is facing an internal struggle. Throughout the play, he is the character who changes the most. First, he and Mama seem to fight quite regularly; they both have bold personalities and think they know what will be best for the family. When Mama uses some of the money to buy a house and gives the remaining…
Martha Janssen, who plays the key role in this story as "Mama" is a dominant member in her family but also very gentle and practical as well at the same time. Her family, which has just migrated from their homeland, Norway is poor and she has to keep detailed in pennywise household budget to survive from moving out of their rented apartment. In order to make things easier, they remained close and together, each member of the Janssen family makes his or her sacrifice. Through this, they display an apparent love for each other.…
Mama, who is described as “a large, big-boned woman with rough, man-working hands” is considered as a strong and loving woman. (par 5). Mama is not your typical woman, who takes care of the house and spends time raising two daughters. Mama has taken on a less feminine and more masculine role. She prides herself on being able to kill a hog as mercilessly as a man. Mama’s heritage comes from experiences from things she has gone through and her interaction from people in her past. When she described herself…
The Character Ruth Lee from the Play "A Raisin in The Sun" seems a low-key woman. Ruth is a woman who cares about the wealth of her family. As described in the Act one, Ruth is a young woman for life has her looking older. Ruth's character reveals a strong woman at heart, but a little stress and frustrated with her life situation. Ruth view life is simple, she sees where the world been and where the world is going. As Ruth faced with a big dilemma, she is pregnant. Her character shows sacrifice and awareness, willing to risk her life to abort the pregnancy. However, the compassion as a mother stops her from ending the pregnancy. In Act two there was hope for Ruth and the future of her family. When Mama Lena bought the house for the family.…
This dream of Mama’s about having a garden really has its parts in the play but really has an impact in her choice at the end of the play.…
Mama is very nervous about Dee coming to visit and has done things to try and make her house look good before Dee gets there. She states "I will wait for her in the yard that Maggie and I made so clean and wavy yesterday afternoon."(92) Mama wants everything to be perfect when she arrives, it is as if Mama needs her approval of the house and everything she has done before she can go…
March 11, 1959 was the first Broadway debut of Lorraine Hansberry’s play A Raisin in the Sun. The play was considered a racial milestone of the time. Stated by The Washington Post, “Its impact on an artistic level had a power like Brown v. Board of Education or Jackie Robinson. It was a moment in theatrical history both epic and serene” (Washington Post 1). A Raisin in the Sun is about a 1950’s African-American family trying to reach their dreams and obtain a better life for themselves. Lorraine Hansberry uses this play as a way to show the struggles of African-American families trying to move towards a better life.…
Mama’s character is the one who defines the meaning of African American culture, in the beginning of the story mama shows envy and also resentment towards her daughter Dee’s candid but overall superficial ways. Dee is portrayed as a bright, intelligent and outspoken individual with all the eccentricities of the black power movement. Mama’s character shows love for her daughter but also hatred for her new found identity. Mama at one point in the story imagines her and Dee being reunited on a talk show and the scene playing out like most would, with lots of tears and embraces of love. But even before she imagines this pleasant scene mama says”…What would they do if parent and child came on the show only to curse out and insult each other”? Mamas envy is also expressed through a thought were she truthfully admits that she could not look “a strange man in the eye”, referring to Johnny Carson hosting the reunion show and then goes on to say “Dee,…
Mama states, “a look of concentration on her face as she watched the last dingy gray board of the house fall in toward the red-hot brick chimney…she had hated the house” (1532). She hates the burned house because it directly reminds Dee of segregation, and inequality in her life before civil rights. The new house is replaced with a mere replica of the burned house revealing Mama’s persistence in preserving heritage. Topics of preserving heritage centralize around the family objects: carved dasher and family quilts. Dee seeks these objects not for their family values but to collect them as lost time artifacts. As an activist for desegregation, Dee rejects her real heritage and wants these items as a remembrance of the past. Mama refuses to give up her familial tied items to someone who will not respectfully make an effort to continue the lineage tied behind them through “everyday use”; another prime example of her tenacity to preserving true familial…
Why does mamas little plant so important to her? It's important to her because it signifies something meaningful to her. She mentions it expresses her because it's a…
Mothers are important because they are the biggest influence on a daughter when she grows up. The mothers give the daughters ideas of how they want to live when they are older – love, family, work, and connection (Robin). The role of the mother is to set examples for the daughter.…
When the entire family starts to put the family’s needs before their own, they realize that the good of the entire family is more important than realizing their own personal goals, and understand the importance of Mama’s dream.…