Saturday, August 22, 2020

Happiness in Fences, by August Wilson, and A Raisin in the Sun, by Lorraine Hansbury :: Fences, A Raisin in the Sun

Envision for a second it is your older sibling's seventeenth birthday celebration. She is out with her companions celebrating, and your folks are at the shopping center with your younger sibling doing some very late birthday shopping, disregarding you home. You at that point hear a thump on the front entryway. At the point when you getthere, no one is there, only a mysterious note taped to the entryway that says Happy Birthday, alongside a hundred dollar greenback. You've been passing on to get that new computer game, and your sister will never know. You are confronted with an intense choice, yet not an extraordinary one. In the two Fences, by August Wilson, and A Raisin in the Sun, by Lorraine Hansbury, extreme choices must be made about getting cash from another person's incident. Yet, cash's that significant right? The job of cash in individuals' everyday lives is very stunning when it's placed into point of view. The essential explanation most Americans get up in the first part of the day is so they can go out and bring in cash. Cash purchases things; cash impacts individuals; cash keeps us ali ve; cash satisfies us. Or then again isn't that right? In Fences, by August Wilson, the Maxtons get their cash when Gabe's head is shot in the war. In A Raisin in the Sun, by Lorraine Hansbury, the Younger family gets their cash when Walter's dad kicks the bucket. Be that as it may, do the se things satisfy them? Obviously not. They are happening upon cash from another person's hardship, somebody they love. The cash may have made life simpler for a concise second in time, however the curiosity before long wears off and reality before long returns. The intriguing thing about these two books is that the cash got by both the Maxtons and the Youngers did precisely something contrary to what everybody anticipated that it should do. It in the long run made issues for both of the families. In Fences, the Maxtons utilized Gabe's cash to purchase a house and despite the fact that it appeared to be a smart thought, when Gabe moved out, it caused a lot of blame in the family, yet particularly in Troy. He just couldn't get over how he 'utilized' somebody he adored so a lot, and they didn't even kn ow it. In A Raisin in the Sun, the Youngers likewise purchase a house with the cash the disaster protection gave them.

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