Preview

Redlining In Hansberry's

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
318 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Redlining In Hansberry's
Hansberry’s drama draws on her own experiences growing up in segregated Chicago. Initially, Chicago was the place to be, everyone was welcome and there were no problems. So, as time went on, tons of African Americans started to move to Chicago and so it started to become heavily populated. Consequently, it got too much and white people began acting hostile towards black people and from that, sprouted redlining. Redlining as defined by Jamelle Bouie, “...the practice of denying key services (like home loans and insurance) or increasing their cost for residents in a defined geographical area”. Redlining was something that was heavily used in Chicago at the time and still effects it to this day. Redlining could be used against any group of people

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Albert Einstein once said “Try not to become a man of success rather try to become a man of value.” A Raisin In the Sun was written by Lorraine Hansberry in nineteen fifty nine.The play explores the struggles of an African American family to achieve their dreams. In the play Walter Lee Younger Jr. the son of Mama(Lena) evolves throughout the trials and tribulations the family faces in the play.…

    • 276 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Best Essays

    A slight contrast to this is the treatment of blacks in the North during the twentieth century. Passing tells the story of two women that could, because of their light skin tone, “pass” off as whites. Although this is a work of fiction, it illustrates a very real way of life for blacks in the North. The northern states had long been known as a safer, more accepting place for blacks, although segregation was…

    • 1607 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Good Essays

    The struggle of equality between black and white communities has been a long and tiresome road. Since Lorraine Hansberry’s “A Raisin in the Sun” is a conflicting short story, play, and film many people has analyzed Lorraine Hansberry’s “A Raisin in the Sun” and have come up with different views or understandings as have Lipari and Saber. While Lisbeth Lipari focuses more on a rhetorical analysis, Yomna Saber emphasizes more on the line between integration and assimilation. In the next several paragraphs the views and interpretations of Lipari and Saber will be examined.…

    • 808 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Literary Elements In Sula

    • 637 Words
    • 3 Pages

    There is the protagonist, Helene, and the innocent bystander in the plot, the black woman on the train. Both of these characters are being discriminated upon by the antagonist, society and the members within society. There are other elements in the short scene, such as conflicts between characters, for example, the men on the train stop, and a character foil between Helene and the black woman. All of these elements portray colored people’s actions, how they were perceived, and how they were treated during a time where racism was to a small extent, but was still included in the daily lives of members of…

    • 637 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The first example of discrimination which causes a huge problem is the discussion of race. Even though the book is written based in the nineties, it was still looked at as frowned upon to be in an interracial relationship. One day while the author was jogging through the park he noticed a very dark black man and a blonde woman jogging with a little terrier. He noticed that when the man turned the corner the first the day he peered behind him at the woman. The next day however he noticed the woman running in front of him and the man, already had passed the turn, again looked back at the woman. He sees these two people everywhere and wonders why they just cannot be together. He discusses it with his friend Joe Odem who tells him, “We don’t do black-on-white in Savannah…especially black male on white female,” (Berendt 55). Joe goes on to tell him that “A lot of things have changed over the past 20 years, but not that”( Berendt 55). However this is not the first time the author faces the harsh discrimination against African Americans in Savannah. Throughout the novel, the author attends these parties where the whole help staff is African American, from the caterer to the waiters and waitresses. There was one woman in particular, Lucille Wright. She was a light-skinned black woman who was known as one of Savannah’s leading hostesses who had catered several events for the rich people of…

    • 854 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “When you suddenly find your tongue twisted and your speech stammering as you seek to explain to your six-year-old daughter why she cannot go to the amusement park that just been advertised on television, and see tears welling up in her little eyes when she is told that Funtown is closed to colored children and see the depression clouds of inferiority begin to form in her little mental sky, and see her begin to distort her little personality by unconsciously developing a bitterness towards white people.(pg. 972 Literature for Life)” During this time blacks and whites could not congregate places. For instance, blacks had to deal with being called out their name while females had to deal with not being address properly.…

    • 534 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The first thought that comes to mind when talking about racism is the separation of two races based on skin tone. “In 1960, when a six-year-old girl enrolled in a white school in New Orleans, parents withdrew their white children in her class. She was the only child in her classroom for over a year.”(Baughman et. al.). In the 1960s, African Americans were mistreated in the US, mostly in the south. Kathryn Stockett, the author, assumed that society wouldn’t be as understanding in her writing The Help, because many wouldn’t clasp the fact that the nation was discriminating.(Stockett). For her, though, it was convenient to write about the other side of the situation in this era. “I don’t have to think about the dialect. It wasn’t hard for me to get that musicality on the page because I started writing the voice of Demeitre and she sounded exactly the way I wrote her.”(Stockett). Growing up, she had an African American maid,Demeitre, in which she got close with, and being accustomed to her always being around, it later got her to write Aibileen’s parts in the…

    • 248 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    It becomes obvious to the reader that the racial tension Hansberry experienced growing up reflected on the way her literature is written. Moss and Wilson state that, “Lorraine Hansberry’s South Side childhood, particularly her father’s battle to move into a white neighborhood, provided the background for the events in the play” (314). Hansberry experienced many of the situations she placed the Younger family at first hand. Hansberry’s father, Carl Hansberry, was put in a similar circumstance when he moved his family into a predominately white community at the opposition of the white neighbors. He eventually won a civil rights case on discrimination. Speaking of the United States, Adler states, “A Raisin in the Sun is a moving drama about securing one’s dignity within a system that discriminates against, even enslaves, its racial minorities” (824).…

    • 1557 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Raisin In The Sun

    • 488 Words
    • 2 Pages

    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.…

    • 488 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    This is demonstrated by Slim, an African American who works on the same ranch as George and Lennie. An old man describes that Slim, “Got a crooked back where a horse kicked him. The boss gives him hell when he’s mad.” This was confirmed on page 29, when George overheard the boss yell out, “Where the hell is that God damn nigger?” Indeed, the unbearable and irrational torment Slim faced every day was similar to the experiences of many other workers that worked on ranches back in the South. On the contrary, most, if not all, modern-day businesses and workforce have desegregation laws that condemns the practice of racial segregation. Moreover, civil rights legislation since the 1960s extend numerous rights to African Americans and other minority groups. The novel told in the modern-day, therefore, would have a slim chance of containing the abuse of power against skin…

    • 508 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In 1930’s America, it was considered normal and acceptable to be a racist. Steinbeck uses the character Crooks, the victim, and Curly’s wife, a racist, to symbolise a racist society. Curly’s wife uses her status in society as a white woman to threaten Crooks. Through-out the novel, Crooks was segregated and isolated from everyone else and is also forced to live separately from the others on the ranch. Crooks was victimised purely because he was a black person, he was almost always called a “Nigger” which in the 1930’s was the world to describe a black person. Racism was never frowned upon in society nor in Steinbeck’s novel as it was a very normal thing to do and nobody considered how the people on the other end felt about it.…

    • 581 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Watching Bob Ewell falsely accuse Tom Robinson just because of his color shows the segregation of people. As a result of this false accusation Tom Robinson lost his life. They “killed a mockingbird”. There was not only discrimination against black people but also with white people. Lula confronts Calpurnia when she took the children to her church. “I wants to know why you bringin‘ white chillun to nigger church” (120). This shows just how discrimination goes both ways in the novel creating the idea of social…

    • 487 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Hurston had lived in an all colored town but had never thought twice about whether she was any different than the white people that rode through her small Florida town. She thought "white people differed from colored people to me only in that they rode through town and never lived there" (36). Hurston's fellow African American neighbors were suspicious of northern white people but did not deem the local white people to merit a single glance when they passed. The specific results of racism are what concern Hurston. The interaction school of symbolic interaction applies here as Hurston chooses to interact with white people passing through the town as if they were no different. All of the other people in Eatonville, Florida distance themselves from the whites that pass through, but Hurston interacts with them as is they are no different than her neighbors in her eyes.…

    • 643 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    She calls upon the of a number of maids who works for her friends; Aibileen, Minny and Pascagoula in order to make her book a real like interpretation of the struggles they face on a daily bases. Jackson has a community that seems to be very racist and oblivious and close minded towards change and fait treatment towards citizens that reside there. The community seemingly split in two divided over an adequate racial line that has been passed down from generations to generations. Stern guidelines and regulations are put in place in order to separate the blacks and white. The writer gives us a glimpse of the Mississippian world back in the day and how maids were treated and the amount of racism and hatred that occurred in Jackson Mississippi. White Mississippians had been brought up and through social conditioning they had a mentality that prevented them to change their views and allow blacks to live the same luxury they had. Whites had more freedom blacks had, they allowed their communities to grow and flourish whereas blacks’ community became congested and overcrowded due to the restrictions preventing their community to grow “Jackson is just one white neighbourhood after the next” and “the coloured part of town be one big…

    • 1770 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    White slave owners in the American South during the 18th and 19th centuries often attempted to make their slaves lose their identity through a variety of means. They did this to empower themselves over the blacks, as the blacks would no longer feel like a real person with a unique and individual identity. Although the patterns of white dominance over blacks have not disappeared over time, they have changed in this regard. In the 1900s, blacks were finally express their own identity, and were not held back by whites. The play “A Raisin in the Sun,” by Lorraine Hansberry, exemplifies this. The play only provides a glimpse into the life of the Younger family and those they interact with, as it takes place over a short period of time. However,…

    • 442 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays