Raisin in The Sun: Lorraine Hansberry'S
Raisin in The Sun: Lorraine Hansberry'S
Raisin in The Sun: Lorraine Hansberry'S
LORRAINE HANSBERRY’S
S E R I E S E D I T O R S :
INTRODUCTION
The certainty that the ideals of “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness” can become reality for anyone willing to work
for them is what we call the American dream. For many, the dream does come true. For many it does not.
Lorraine Hansberry knew about disappointment, false hope, and despair. For many of her African-American ancestors
who had come north for a better life only to find exploitation and frustration, the dream had become a nightmare. In
contemporary terms, she chronicles their nightmare in A Raisin in the Sun, an epic story of the Younger family struggling
to realize the dream by escaping ghetto life. Hansberry’s screenplay not only tells the story of the Youngers but reveals the
plight of all who have failed dreams.
Her cosmic vision gives Raisin its power. For high school juniors who often study U.S. history concurrently with
American literature, this previously unpublished version of the screenplay allows students to read an engrossing American
play, while they experience a culture that either mirrors their own lives or provides a window into a world of people who
are more similar to them than they are different from them.
Raisin is an excellent choice for literature, drama, history, and film classes. There is plenty of action, salty dialogue, and a
cast of dynamic characters to captivate even the most “video-ed out” teenager. Rebellion against parents and frustration
with a lifestyle that brings little gratification are conditions most young people endure. However, beneath the cynical
veneer of the adolescent, beats the heart of an idealist who wants to believe in dreams that do come true. Through
Hansberry’s careful craftsmanship, the universal themes of the importance of dreams and the frustration of dreams
deferred, the strength of family, the importance of not selling out, the problems of conflicting expectations, the belief that
love and trust will win over deceit and selfishness, and the dangers of prejudice and stereotyping are as powerful today as
they were nearly four decades ago when she wrote the play. Today’s students, often from fractured families, need as much
exposure as possible to values taught within a traditional family unit, and Raisin delivers without preaching.
Another reason for using Raisin is its historical value. The play is a provocative reflection of racial attitudes of the 1950s
and of today. Prejudice assumes many forms, and Hansberry’s characters and the screenplay’s visuals bring this theme to
life in a way no textbook could.
This teacher’s guide contains an annotated list of characters, a brief synopsis of the screenplay, and teaching suggestions
to be used before, during, and after reading the play. There are activities, discussion questions, and topics for writing
assignments. All suggestions are applicable for students of average academic ability. Those recommended for the advanced
student are denoted with an asterisk (*).
OVERVIEW
DRAMATIS PERSONAE
Lena Younger
matriarch; proud; strong-willed; deeply religious; believes in the strength of family
Walter Lee Younger Jr.
ambitious; loves his family; longs to prove his manhood by owning his own business
Beneatha Younger
as ambitious as her brother with plans to be a doctor; needs to express herself, as her varying hobbies indicate;
interested in her African roots
Ruth Younger
loving and faithful wife and mother; wants what’s best for her family; her dream is to move into a place with
more space and sunlight
Travis Younger
his family’s pride and hope for the future; typically energetic ten year old
A Teacher’s Guide to Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun 3
Asagai
fellow student; loves Beneatha; a “modern” African, committed to preserving the cultural heritage of his Nigerian
people
George Murchison
modern African American who believes that success lies in imitating whites; scorned by Walter Lee who
considers him a phony
BEFORE READING
Either see a film or video as a class or have the students brainstorm ones they have seen. Using a film or video most of
the students have seen in common, ask students to respond in writing or orally to the following:
• What does a film have that a play does not? Give some examples.
• What does a play have that a film does not? How does this change each medium?
• What is the camera’s role in a film?
• How is the camera used to enhance our knowledge of the plot and of characters?
• Of the two media (stage or film), which has the more fluid movement; why do you think so? Give some examples
from films you have seen.
To help students learn the technical terms related to a screenplay, suggest that they develop individual or small group
glossaries of film terms: pan shots, tracking shots, traveling shots, full shot, two shot, close up, dissolve, P.O.V. (point of
view), short, long, medium shots, high angle, and montage. Have students define each term and provide an example from
films or videos they have seen of how each is used.
Group discussion: To give students a frame of reference, discuss a familiar film or video asking the students for examples
of each type of shot.
Assign two or three types of shots to several small groups. As a homework assignment ask students to watch a video
selected by their group and prepare to present examples of each type of shot to the class. They can show sections of the
video to the class as they explain the camera technique employed.
In pairs, students can prepare a notebook of visuals from either magazines or the students’ own photography illustrating
several different types of film shots. Entries should be labeled and defined. Students should explain in writing the message
the camera is attempting to convey and how this is accomplished.
USE OF LANGUAGE
Lorraine Hansberry uses language to help develop her characters. As in Shakespearean drama, the language in A Raisin in
the Sun reflects the social and economic status of the characters in the play. It is helpful for students to understand that
the language of the characters helps viewers understand who they are.
Point out to the students some examples of how language helps us know Hansberry’s characters.
RUTH: What you mean, out? He ain’t hardly had a chance to be in there good yet.(9)
WALTER: Un-hunh. That’s what you mad about, ain’t it? The things I got to talk about with my friends just
couldn’t be important in you mind, could they! (11)
TRAVIS: Teacher says we got to do something ‘bout teaching colored kids ‘bout their history. So they set up a
fund to buy special books that tell all about the things the poor Negroes did. (13-14)
LENA: Near ‘bout. ‘Cept-’cept, Lord have mercy, when the war, praise God, come along a few years back. That
sure changed things for a while. My husband had been a porter on the railroads all his life, and just as soon as
we heard they had started taking colored in the de-fense plants and all, me and him both marched right on over
and took the classes they was giving in the welding and all. (41)
ASAGAI: Because I suppose all Africans are revolutionaries today, even those who don’t know that they are. It
is the times. In order to survive we must be against most of what is. (50)
BENEATHA: Mama, you don’t understand. It’s all a matter of ideas, and God is just one idea I don’t acept. It’s
not important. I an not going out and commit crimes or be immoral because I don’t believe in God. I don’t even
think about it. It’s just that I get so tired of Him getting credit for all the things the human race achieves through
its own stubborn effort. There simply is no God! There is only Man, and it’s he who makes miracles! (76)
LENA: Now-you say after me: “In my mother’s house there is still God.” (Silence.) “In my mother’s house there
is still God.” (77)
LINDNER: Well-it’s what you might call a sort of welcoming committee, I guess. I mean they-we-I’m the
chairman of the committee-go around and see the new people who move into the neighborhood and sort of give
them the lowdown on the way we do things out in Clybourne Park....And we also have the category of what the
association calls-(he looks eleswhere)-uh-special community problems.... (161)
In small groups, have the students respond to or complete the following.
• What do each of these quotes tell you about each person’s character, beliefs, fears, frustrations? What emotions are
you likely to hear in the person’s voice?
• Prepare one quote to present to the class as you believe the character would deliver it to the audience. Try it using
different tones of voice. Does the meaning change?
• If the quote is in non-standard English, rewrite it in standard English. Now, answer the same questions about each
rewritten quote.
• Prepare to deliver the quote you rewrote to the class as originally written and in standard English. Ask the class: What
does each version suggest about the character?
A Teacher’s Guide to Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun 8
WHILE READING
Teachers will want to select some activities from the many suggestions offered.
FILM TECHNIQUES
It is helpful to analyze Hansberry’s camera instructions closely as you read. Ask: What silent messages do they convey?
The following camera shots represent highlights from the screenplay; students should be encouraged to find others:
• Pan shots of Chicago’s Southside (3). Ask: Who lives here? Why do they live here? Why does Hansberry think these
shots are important?
• Pan shot within the Younger apartment (4-7). Ask: How does this shot introduce us to the family and the likely
action of the film?
• Closeups of Lena’s hands (31), Walter’s hands (43), their employers’ hand (39,45). Ask: What do hands reveal about
character and lifestyle? Why does Hansberry put so much emphasis on hands?
• Exterior shots of the neighborhoods Lena and Walter must pass through enroute home to their apartment (57). Ask:
What are these neighborhoods like? Why is Hansberry emphasizing these shots?
• Interior shots of Beneatha’s relatively sheltered college routine (47). Ask: What do these shots tell us about Beneatha?
Why is this knowledge important?
• Exterior high/wide angle shot of Lena’s detour to the open market (56). Ask: What point is Hansberry making in this shot?
• Interior/wide angle shots of Walter drinking with Willy and Bobo in the type of lounge for which they hope to
provide liquor (81). Ask: What does this shot reveal about Walter and his dreams?
• Montage of Walter drinking alone, driving around Chicago, wandering aimlessly around the Loop, stopping under
the Negro Soldier’s monument, listening to the street preacher harangue (128-132). Ask: What do these shots tell us
about Walter? About his life? What do they reveal about the plot of the screenplay?
• The juxtaposition of shots of Asagai, the new African, with shots of Walter (132-133). Ask: What do these shots
reveal about these two characters? Why is the juxtaposition important?
• Shots of the Youngers’ visit to Clybourne Park including the neighbors’ reactions (149-151). What do these shots
reveal about what is to occur in the plot? What do we learn about the family from these shots?
• The final shot of the apartment, window, plant, and Walter Lee and Lena (206). What does this shot reveal about
the characters and about their dreams?
Because this is a screenplay that is meant to be acted and seen, it is best when read orally by the students. To help them
integrate the words with the images suggested by Hansberry’s camera instructions, stop their reading periodically and ask:
• What does this shot convey about the character (or setting)? For example: The QUICK FLASH of Lena’s annoyed
face as she is being sold inferior apples (52).
• Why is this type of shot specified rather than another? For example: Later in the scene, Hansberry’s directions change
to a CLOSE SHOT of Lena’s outraged face (53).
• How do the words spoken (or image seen) represent this character’s point of view? For example: Mrs. Holiday, Lena’s employer,
is looking around the kitchen while Lena is speaking to her from the sink where she is washing a child’s toys (39).
• Why is the camera on “this” character (scene) when another character is speaking? For example: Walter receiving his
chauffeuring assignment for the morning (45).
As students become familiar with the interrelationships of camera shots, dialogue, and action, informal writing responses
might be assigned.
• Offer your own camera directions as if you were writing the screen play, defending why you altered Hansberry’s directions.
A Teacher’s Guide to Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun 9
UNDERSTANDING IRONY
The voice heard in Raisin in the Sun is ironic. Students can be helped to see the irony in the screenplay by responding to
it orally or in writing. Examples of irony can be suggested as they read, and they can then be encouraged to keep their
own list of the play’s ironies.
• African Americans came north to find the economic, social, and educational equality denied them in the south only to
discover the same (133-134). Examples of this can be seen throughout the screenplay: the inadequate housing in the
ghettos (4-5), the lack of materials in Travis’ school (13), and price gouging in an African-American neighborhood (56).
• The irony of having to pay more for homes and food (56) in poor neighborhoods than in rich neighborhoods.
• Lena’s labors ease those of the Holiday family although Lena receives no leisure time or holidays (31-42). Mr. Lindner
extols the values of hard work and neighborhood pride as he offers the Youngers “easy” money to stay away from
Clybourne Park (162-167).
• Beneatha and Asagai. Asagai reveals his compassionate understanding of human nature and his wisdom; his proposal
to Beneatha (180-190).
• The Younger family. Walter announces that he has agreed to accept Lindner’s offer; Walter’s moment of recognition
when he subsequently refuses it (193-202).
As a complementary writing assignment, compare Walter Lee, Beneatha, and Lena as rebels. How are the young people
really like their mother? Use citations from the screenplay.*
Write about Asagai, the “modern” black man. How are his values and the more traditional Lena’s surprisingly alike? Use
citations from the screenplay.*
The minor characters can be assigned to a small group of students and treated as a unit. Ask students to analyze the
function of each character in the screenplay according to the following guidelines: What does the character do to extend
the plot; to explain another character; or to enhance a theme?
• Mrs. Holiday, Lena’s employer (31-42).
• Mr. and Mrs. Arnold, Walter’s employers (43-45).
• The white clerk at the neighborhood grocery (51-53).
• Mrs. Johnson, the Youngers’ neighbor (54-55).
• Herman, the white clerk in a liquor store (59-63).
• Bobo and Willy Harris, Walter’s hoped-for business partners (81-84).
• Mr. Lindner, the insensitive emissary from the Clybourne Park Neighborhood Association (157-168).
In an essay, discuss the different values represented by Lena, Walter, George Murchison, Beneatha, and Asagai. Why do
you think these differences exist? As part of this assignment, you might want to read Spike Lee’s commentary (xiv), noting
the difference between “assimilationism” and “Afrocentricity” as he describes them.*
In an essay, explore the concept of black pride. Consider the definition of black pride and how different characters
embody it. Opinions should be defended through research and citations from the screenplay.*
In a small group, discuss which character(s) represents Hansberry’s voice. Explain your rationale.*
In an informal essay, discuss the meaning of manliness. In your opinion what makes a “real” man? Extend your personal
beliefs to the screenplay, defining Walter Lee’s concept of manhood. In his eyes what makes a “real” man? Trace the ways
he changes as the film develops. To what extent do his ideas and yours coincide?
Write a portrait of Walter Lee, Sr. Although he is dead, his influence permeates the entire screenplay. From Lena’s
comments, what were his values? (43, 70, 108, 201). Is she being fair when she compares him to her son? In what ways
are father and son similar?*
UNDERSTANDING SYMBOLS
Throughout the play, Hansberry uses many symbols. The play will have much more meaning if students are aware of
these.
Lena’s Plant. Ask students:
• What do most plants represent?
• How is the introduction of the plant early in the screenplay foreshadowing?
• How do the shots of and references to the plant reflect the corresponding action of the screenplay? (7, 66, 78, 170, 206)
Sunlight and contrasting darkness. (69, 126, 151).
• Make a collage or play music to show this contrast.
A Teacher’s Guide to Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun 11
AFTER READING
camera conveys in the film version. You will need to decide how you will incorporate the fluid cinematic approach into
the more “static” stage medium.
UNDERSTANDING CHARACTER
With a partner, pretend you are a producer and director who is auditioning actors for a new film of Raisin in the Sun.
Make a list of what characteristics you would seek in actors portraying each of the major characters. Include physical as
well as personality characteristics.
Students can experiment making their own mini-video production of sequels to Raisin in the Sun featuring the same characters.
• Walter Lee two years later. What has he done about the liquor store?
• Ruth and the new baby. Is she staying home?
• Lena and her family. Did she return to work for the Holidays? How is her garden growing?
• Beneatha. Did she stay in school? Did she marry Asagai?
• Travis. How is he contributing to the family now?
• Mr. Lindner and the neighbors. Are they still hostile?
• Discuss the white Americans in the screenplay: Mrs. Holiday, the Arnolds, Herman the grocery store clerk, and Mr.
Lindner. What is their attitude towards the African Americans they deal with? Are these attitudes typical of the
1950s? How would the attitudes be the same or different today?
• Do a group research project on the status of African Americans in the late 1950s, when the play was written, and
today. Include such things as level of salaries, types of jobs, housing, and other demographic information available in
numerous sources. Compare this data to data on white Americans during both periods. Present your information to
the class and discuss.
• A Raisin in the Sun was written in 1958. Discuss as a class or in a small group: What makes it drama-worthy? Why
does it appeal to multiracial audiences? Is it dated, or are the issues raised still relevant?*
• Read Jewell Gresham-Nemiroff ’s remarks about Hansberry’s purpose for writing Raisin in the Sun (x-xiii). Does
Hansberry succeed in creating real people rather than racial stereotypes? What does she teach us about the American
dream (xii) for both African and white Americans?*
BIBLIOGRAPHY
RACIAL PREJUDICE
NONFICTION
Bogle, Donald. Toms, Coons, Mulattoes, Mammies & Bucks. New York: Continuum Pub. Co., 1993.*
Hacker, Andrew. Two Nations: black and white, separate, hostile, unequal. New York: Scribner’s, 1982.*
Lindsey, Paul and Ouida Lindsey. Breaking the Bonds of Racism. Homewood,Ill.: Q ETC Publications, 1974.*
West, Cornel. Race Matters. New York: Random House, 1994.*
FICTION
Carey, Lorene. Black Ice. New York: Random House, 1991.
Hunter, Kristin. The Soul Brothers and Sister Lou. New York: Scribner’s, 1968.
Sebestyn, Ouida. Words by Heart. Boston, MA: Little Brown, 1979.
Walter, Mildred. The Girl On the Outside. New York: Lothrop, Lee, and Shepard, 1982.
A Teacher’s Guide to Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun 15
FAMILY STRENGTH
Comer, James P. Maggie’s American Dream. New York, NAL, 1989.*
Haley, Alex. Roots. Garden City: Doubleday, 1976.
Porte, Barbara A. I Only Made Up the Roses. New York: Greenwillow Books, 1987.
Taylor, Mildred. Roll of Thunder Hear My Cry. New York: Puffin Books, 1991.
Let the Circle Be Unbroken. New York: Dial Press, 1981.
DREAMS DEFERRED
NONFICTION
Angelou, Maya. I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings. New York: Random House, 1970.*
Gather Together in My Name. New York: Random House, 1974.
Hansberry, Lorraine. To be Young, Gifted, and Black: Lorraine Hansberry in Her Own Words. New York: NAL: Dutton, 1970.
FICTION
Lipsyte, Robert. The Contender. New York: Harper and Row, 1967.
Walker, Alice. The Color Purple. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1982.*
DRAMA
Branch, William B., editor. Black Thunder: An Anthology of Contemporary African American Drama. New York: NAL, 1992.
Hansberry, Lorraine. A Raisin in the Sun. New York: Random House, 1959.
To be Young, Gifted, and Black (video). PBS Great Performances, 1972.
Miller, Arthur. The Death of a Salesman. New York: Viking, 1949.
Williams, Tennessee. The Glass Menagerie. New York: NAL, 1990.
Wilson, August. The Piano Lesson. New York: NAL, 1990.*
POETRY
Adoff, Arnold. I Am the Darker Brother. New York: Macmillan, 1968.
WENDY H. BELL attended Sarah Lawrence College, received a B.A. in English from the University of Louisville, and
did graduate work at the University of Michigan (Ann Arbor). Currently an English teacher at Enka High School in Enka,
N.C., Ms. Bell has been employed as an English teacher by the Buncombe County, N.C. schools since 1980. She currently
teaches freshman honors classes and American literature.
Ms. Bell is a member of the National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE), the North Carolina English Teachers
Association, the North Carolina Association of Educators, and Delta Kappa Gamma. She has been published in The
ALAN Review, the English Journal, the North Carolina English Teacher, and the Arizona English Bulletin.
ABOUT THE EDITORS OF THIS GUIDE
W. GEIGER ELLIS, Professor Emeritus, University of Georgia, received his A.B. and M.Ed. degrees from the University of North Carolina
(Chapel Hill) and his Ed.D. from the University of Virginia. His teaching focused on adolescent literature, having introduced the first
courses on the subject at both the University of Virginia and the University of Georgia. He developed and edited The ALAN Review.
ARTHEA (CHARLIE) REED, PH.D. is currently a long-term care specialist with Northwestern Mutual Financial Network and senior
partner of Long-Term Care and Associates. From 1978 to 1996 she was a professor of education and chairperson of the Education
Department at the University of North Carolina at Asheville. She is the author or co-author of 15 books in the fields of adolescent
literature, foundations of education, and methods of teaching. She was the editor of The ALAN Review for six years and president of the
Assembly on Literature for Adolescents of the National Council of Teachers of English (ALAN). She is currently co-authoring the 5th
edition of A Guide to Observation, Participation, and Reflection in the Classroom (McGraw-Hill 2004). She has taught almost every grade
from second grade through doctoral candidates. She lives in Asheville, North Carolina with her husband Don, two dogs, and a cat.
TEACHER’S GUIDES
Animal Farm • Anthem • Beloved • Beowulf • The Call of the Wild • Cannery Row • City of God • The Country of the
Pointed Firs and Other Stories • The Crucible • Death of a Salesman • Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde • Dubliners • Ethan Frome •
The Fountainhead • Girl in Hyacinth Blue • The Grapes of Wrath • A Journey to the Center of the Earth • The Jungle •
The Life of Ivan Denisovich • Looking Backward • Lysistrata • Main Street • Of Mice and Men • The Mousetrap and
Other Plays • A Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave • Nectar in a Sieve • 1984 • The Odyssey •
The Passion of Artemisia • The Pearl • Persuasion • The Prince and the Pauper • A Raisin in the Sun • The Red Pony • Redwall •
The Scarlet Letter • The Scarlet Pimpernel • Silas Marner • A Tale of Two Cities • The Time Machine • Up from Slavery •
The Women of Brewster Place • Wuthering Heights
Visit the Penguin Group (USA) web site at www.penguin.com to browse all Signet Classic paperback editions
and www.penguin.com/scessay for information about the Annual Signet Classic Scholarship Essay Contest