Title: A Raisin in the Sun
1A Raisin in the Sun
2HISTORICAL CONTEXT
3Racism and Segregation
Jim Crow Laws
4(No Transcript)
5(No Transcript)
6Strange Fruitperformed by Billie Holiday
Southern trees bear strange fruitBlood on the
leavesBlood at the rootBlack bodies swinging in
the southern breezeStrange fruit hanging from
the poplar treesPastoral scene of the gallant
southThe bulging eyes and the twisted mouthThe
scent of magnolia sweet and freshThen the sudden
smell of burning fleshHere is a fruit for the
crows to pluckfor the rain to gatherfor the
wind to suckfor the sun to rotfor the tree to
dropHere is a strange and bitter crop
7The Play
8A Raisin in the Sun
- Opened on Broadway on March 11, 1959
- Cast includes Sidney Poitier, Claudia McNeil, and
Ruby Dee - The New York Drama Critics name it the Best
American Play of 1959 - Ran for nearly 2 years on Broadway
- Made into a film starring most of the Broadway
cast in 1961
9Connection with Hansberrys Life
- Hansberrys father was a wealthy, real estate
broker in segregated Chicago - In 1937, her father purchased a home in the
Washington Park Subdivision - Washington Park had a restrictive covenant that
said no black person could live in or own a home
in the subdivision - Washington Park fought Hansberry and they went to
court in 1937
10- Judge orders the Hansberrys eviction on August
19, 1938 - Hansberry appeals to the Supreme Court of
Illinois - The case of Hansberry, et al vs. Lee, et al goes
all the way to the Supreme Court of the United
States on October 25, 1940 - The U.S. Supreme Court deems restrictive
covenants non-existant
11Hansberry Decision Opens 500 New Homes to
RaceThe Chicago Defender Saturday, November
16, 1940
12Iron Ring in HousingThe Crisis (NAACP
Magazine) 47.7 (July, 1940)
- NAACP estimates that 80 of Chicago is covered by
restrictive covenants - The iron ring of restrictive covenants which
surrounds the Negro community has prevented its
normal expansion in spite of the fact that the
colored population has more than doubled in in
the last two decades. Within the community
practically no living units have been built and
few new residences have been made available
during the past twelve years.