A Raisin in the Sun

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A Raisin in the Sun
Unit Test Review Game
What is the setting of the play?

A small, cramped, run-down apartment in Southside Chicago; “sometime
between World War II and the present” (1950s)
Who wrote A Raisin in the Sun?

Lorraine Hansberry
What does the description of the setting
reveal about the lives of the characters?

They are poor, but proud. Their furnishings are worn and old, but the
apartment is clean and “scrubbed too often.”
What does sunlight likely symbolize
within the play?

Hope; there is very little light in the beginning of the play; the family longs
for light in the new house
How does the audience learn how strong
Mama’s religious beliefs are?

She yells at Beneatha for using the Lord’s name in vain, and she slaps
Beneatha when she says there is no God.
What is Walter’s dream?

To buy a liquor store
What is Beneatha’s dream?

To become a doctor
What is Mama’s dream?

To buy a house for her family
What is an assimilationist?

Someone who conforms to the dominant culture
What is Ruth considering because of the
family’s economic situation?

Aborting her child
Name a pair of character foils from the
play.

Beneatha and Ruth

George and Asagai
What does George Murchison call Walter
and what does it mean?

Prometheus; he is saying that Walter’s ambitions are unreachable or he might
find trouble reaching for his goals
Who does Mama reveal her news to first?

Travis; he is the family’s legacy
What news does Mrs. Johnson bring the
Youngers?

A newspaper article about a house owned by a black family in a white
neighborhood that was bombed
Who is Karl Lindner? Why is he visiting
the Youngers?

A representative from the Clybourne Park Improvement Association that is
offering to buy their house from them if they agree to not move to the
neighborhood
Explain what Mama’s plans for the
money were.

$3,000 down payment for the house

$3,000 for Beneatha’s medical school

$3,500 to Walter
What happens to the $10,000?

Mama spends $3,000 on the house

Walter uses the remaining $6,500 to invest in the liquor store

Willy Harris steals Walter’s money
What does Mama’s plant symbolize?

The family
What is a possible theme for the play?

A truly mature individual chooses their pride over possible financial gain.
What is Karl Lindner symbolically?

The devil
The common motif where a devil-like figure
offers a character a deal is known as a what?

Faustian Bargain
Explain how Walter feels about
Beneatha becoming a doctor.

He feels she should just become a nurse; this is reflective of how most of
1950s society felt about women
Name and label a conflict from the play.

Answers will vary; one response would be Walter’s internal man vs man
struggle to decide whether or not to take Linder’s money
Where does the title for the play come
from?

Langston Hughes’s poem “Harlem”
How is Walter similar to John Proctor
from The Crucible?

Answers will vary; they are both the protagonists of the their play, they both
face a Faustian Bargain, they both struggle with internal conflicts, they both
are adult males, fathers and husbands, they both have marriage difficulties,
they are both unsatisfied with their societies, they both are partly responsible
for their problems

They are different because they are in starkly different settings, Walter is an
African American male in the 1950s, Proctor is a Puritan man in the 1600’s.
What could George Murchison represent
symbolically?

Assimilationsim
What could Joseph Asagai represent
symbolically?

Holding onto one’s heritage
Describe Walter and Ruth’s relationship.

They love each other and they are passionate at times, but Walter’s
sometimes allows his struggles to come between them. Ruth is very nurturing
and she cares for Walter, like when she offers him “hot milk.” Walter’s
dismissiveness of Ruth and their financial stuggles almost leads her to have an
abortion.
What does Asagai’s nickname for
Beneatha mean?

One for whom bread is not enough
How is the poem “Harlem” relate to the
play?

The poem discusses possible outcomes when some people’s dreams are
deferred. The play deals with a family with various dreams that are in
jeopardy throughout the play.
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