Thursday, May 23, 2019

Racism: a Raisin in the Sun and Family

Man Walter Lee Is a dreaded man, shackled by poverty and prejudice, and haunt with a business Idea that he thinks allow solve all of his economic and social problems. He thought the novel Is looking for ways to carry his family on and give them every material thing they want. He Is desperate because he sees the other good deal with economic resources while his family is struggling to move on.He is the perfect example of the mid twentieth-century men who suppose they are the ones who have o carry their families with the economic resources and struggle to achieve it, thats why he gets desperate because although he tries he seems he is not acquire it. Sometime these men get blind and dont realized what really they are doing because the will to help their family is too big. Throughout the novel Walter looks for ways to give the family what they want.He whole works on liquor store and he thinks that will provide him the financial security needed to boost them out of poverty, but so metimes he gets desperate and thinks none of this will help him. Sometimes Its eke I burn see the future stretched out In front of me Just plain as day. The future, Mama. respite over there at the edge of my days. Just waling for me a big, looming blank space full of 522). One can clearly see how Walter fears that his life will always be a life of nothing. He is overwhelmed by a sense of dread and fears that his suffering will continue on and on forever.Walter was so desperate he often fights and argues with compassion, Mama, and Beneath. Also a thing that makes him like that is the racism at that time he often see who the White sight from high social status had everything they want, kids attended different schools, neighborhoods were separate from the other, that also made him be like that. He was so desperate he inks to a new low and calls Mr.. loaner back, saying that hell accept the Money, a think his family was not agree with. This is really Walters lowest point In the whole play. Hes alert to totally shame himself for the money.In the end, though, Walter Is redeemed when he eventually refuses to take the money from Mr.. Lender. Once he begins to listen to Mama and Ruth express their dreams of owning a house, he realizes that buying the house is more important for the familys welfare than getting rich quickly. Walter finally becomes a man when he stands up to Mr.. Lender and refuses the money that Mr.. Lender offers the family not to move in to its dream house in a white neighborhood. Talking bout life, Mama. Mama, you know its all divided up. Life is. sure enough. Between the takers and the token. Ive figured it out finally. Yeah.Some of us always getting token. (Handlebars 570). What Walter did here was correct because he was qualification horrible mistakes for him and his family instead of helping them he was making the wrong thing. He looked to much the other things and envy what the white people had made him almost took the wrong decision , but because he listen Mama and Ruth he realized that accomplishing a family dream will fulfill them more the Glenn them material things. Having a house was always Mamas dream. Although undergoes the greatest transformation. His Journey takes him from total Jerk, obsessed with get-rich-quick schemes, to a man worthy of respect.In Walter Younger, Lorraine Handlebars shows how poverty and racism can twist and depress people, turning them against those that they most love. Of course throughout Walter, Handlebars shows us how these social barriers can be overcome through personal determination and staying true to ones own beliefs. Sometimes one care too much about the things other people had and the willing of getting them make you think in wrong way, and instead of helping the ones you one to help you end making and error for yourself and the people you precious to help.

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