Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. A list of all the characters in A Raisin in the Sun. A Raisin in the Sun characters include: Walter Younger, Mama, Walter Younger Sr., Beneatha Younger, Joseph Asagai, Ruth Younger, George Murchison, Mr. Karl Lindner, Travis Younger, Willy Harris, Mrs. Johnson.

    • Mama

      Characters A Raisin in the Sun Mama (Lena Younger) Previous...

    • Walter Younger

      Characters A Raisin in the Sun Walter Younger. Previous Next...

  2. Beneatha Younger. Nicknamed “Bennie,” Beneatha is Mama’s daughter and Walter Lee’s younger sister. A twenty-year-old college student with dreams of becoming a doctor, Beneatha is “as slim and intense as her brother,” with an “intellectual face.”. Beneatha… read analysis of Beneatha Younger.

  3. Character List. Ruth Younger The thirtyish wife of Walter Lee Younger and the mother of Travis, their ten-year-old son. Ruth acts as peacemaker in most of the explosive family situations. Very low-key, Ruth reveals her strongest emotions only when she learns of the possibility of their moving to a better neighborhood.

  4. Extended Character Analysis. Lena Younger, also known as Mama, is the matriarch of the Younger family and plays a significant role in the events of the play. A retired domestic worker, she works ...

  5. Historical Context of A Raisin in the Sun. In the 1920s and 30s the discriminatory “Jim Crow” laws in the South prompted many African Americans to relocate to Northern cities, a movement called the Great Migration. Nonetheless, while the North did not have laws demanding policies of segregation be followed, discrimination persisted also in ...

  6. The matriarch of the Younger family, Lena, commonly referred to as “Mama,” is Walter Lee and Beneatha’s mother and Travis’ grandmother. Lena is a “full-bodied and strong” woman in her early sixties with a subtle air of “grace and beauty.”. Lena possesses the “noble bearing” of a woman of “Southwest Africa,” although her ...

  7. People also ask

  8. Raisin actually tells the story of Walter Lee — granted that his is a story greatly influenced by Mama. A proud woman, Lena Younger does not have much material wealth, but she walks tall, exudes dignity, and carries herself, as Hansberry says, with the "noble bearing of the women of the Heroes of Southwest Africa [a pastoral people]," as though she walks with a "basket or a vessel upon her ...

  1. People also search for