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		<title>Raisin Review Quiz</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 16 Mar 2010 11:49:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Mr. Naymik</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Take the following quiz to test your knowledge of the play and earn some extra credit. You must log in to complete it.  Best in Firefox, but works in new Internet Explorer.
Sorry, quiz closed. Due Monday, March 22, 2010


Related posts:Raisin in the Sun Essay Now that we’ve finished the , combine your knowledge of...
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<li><a href='http://www.naymik.com/learn/us-lit-ii/more-native-american-myths/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: More Native American Myths'>More Native American Myths</a> <small>Here are a few videos telling Native American myths. This...</small></li>
<li><a href='http://www.naymik.com/learn/us-lit-ii/a-raisin-in-the-sun-intro/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: A Raisin in the Sun Intro'>A Raisin in the Sun Intro</a> <small>A Raisin in the Sun was first produced in 1959...</small></li>
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Take the following quiz to test your knowledge of the play and earn some extra credit. You must log in to complete it.  Best in Firefox, but works in new Internet Explorer.</p>
<p><strong>Sorry, quiz closed. Due Monday, March 22, 2010</strong></p>


<p>Related posts:<ol><li><a href='http://www.naymik.com/learn/us-lit-ii/raisin-in-the-sun-essay/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: Raisin in the Sun Essay'>Raisin in the Sun Essay</a> <small>Now that we’ve finished the , combine your knowledge of...</small></li>
<li><a href='http://www.naymik.com/learn/us-lit-ii/more-native-american-myths/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: More Native American Myths'>More Native American Myths</a> <small>Here are a few videos telling Native American myths. This...</small></li>
<li><a href='http://www.naymik.com/learn/us-lit-ii/a-raisin-in-the-sun-intro/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: A Raisin in the Sun Intro'>A Raisin in the Sun Intro</a> <small>A Raisin in the Sun was first produced in 1959...</small></li>
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		<title>A Raisin in the Sun Intro</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 11 Mar 2010 14:37:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Mr. Naymik</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[US Literature II]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[A Raisin in the Sun was first produced in 1959 and anticipates many of the issues which were to divide American culture during the decade of the 1960s.


Related posts:<ol><li><a href='http://www.naymik.com/learn/us-lit-ii/the-american-dream/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: The American Dream'>The American Dream</a> <small>The central idea behind A Raisin in Sun is the...</small></li>
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>Introduction</h3>
<p>[goog doc="dc4kzt6f_22gvbsdq64"]Class Notes[/goog]</p>
<div class="wp-pull-list aligncenter" style="width: 260px;"><p class="wp-pull-list-text">Raisin Study Questions</p><img src="http://www.naymik.com/learn/wp-content/uploads/icons/attachment-28x28.png" style="border: 0px;" valign="middle"/> <strong><a href="http://www.naymik.com/learn/wp-content/plugins/download-monitor/download.php?id=44" title="Downloaded 2 times">Raisin Study Questions</a></strong><p><small>19.31 KB, pdf, 2 hits, 2010-03-11</small></p><p class="wp-pull-list-cap">US Literature II, Handouts</p></div>
<p>A Raisin in the Sun was first produced in 1959 and anticipates many of the issues which were to divide American culture during the decade of the 1960s. Lorraine Hansberry, the playwright, was an unknown dramatist who achieved unprecedented success when her play became a Broadway sensation. Not only were successful women playwrights rare at the time, but successful young black women playwrights were virtually unheard of. Within its context, the success of A Raisin in the Sun is particularly stunning.</p>
<p>In part because there were few black playwrights—as well as few black men and women who could attend Broadway productions—the play was hindered by a lack of financial support during its initial production. Producers hesitated to risk financial involvement in such an unprecedented event, for had the play been less well-written or well-acted, it could have suffered an incredible failure. Eventually, however, the play did find financial backing, and after staging initial performances in New Haven, Connecticut, it reached Broadway.</p>
<div class="wp-pull alignright" style="width: 260px;">
<p>Not only were successful women playwrights rare at the time, but successful young black women playwrights were virtually unheard of. Within its context, the success of A Raisin in the Sun is particularly stunning.</p>
<p class="wp-pull-text">special note</p>
</div>
<p>Compounding the racial challenges the play posed was its length of nearly three hours as it was originally written. Because audiences are not accustomed to plays of such length, especially by a newcomer, a couple of significant scenes were cut from the original production. (These scenes are sometimes included in later renditions.) These scenes include Walter&#8217;s bedtime conversation with Travis and the family&#8217;s interaction with Mrs. Johnson. In addition, the scene in which Beneatha appears with a &#8220;natural&#8221; haircut was eliminated in the original version primarily because Diana Sands, the actress, was not attractive enough with this haircut to reinforce the point of the scene. This scene would become more crucial as cultural ideas shifted.</p>

<h3>Lorraine Hansberry&#8211;&gt;</h3>
<p>Lorraine Hansberry was born in 1930, and was the first African-American woman to win the Best American Play award from the New York Drama Critics Circle. She was the fifth woman and the youngest American to ever have done so. She was given this award for her play, A Raisin in the Sun, which was written when she was in her twenties, and was first performed on Broadway in 1959.</p>
<p>Lorraine Hansberry started writing when she was a young woman. When she was 22 years old, she declared to her later-to-be husband, Robert Nemiroff:</p>
<blockquote><p>I am a writer. I am going to write!</p></blockquote>
<p>Her husband then later became her literary executor (the person in charge of handling her writing) after her early death due to cancer, when she was 34 years old.</p>
<p>When she was a college student, she wrote a piece for her school magazine which foretold the driving concerns which would form the basis for A Raisin in the Sun:</p>
<blockquote><p>What is it exactly that we Negroes want to see on the screen? The answer is simple reality. We want to see film about a people who live and work like everybody else, but who currently must battle fierce oppression to do so.</p></blockquote>
<p>Even so, when she had completed writing A Raisin in the Sun, Ms. Hansberry could not quite believe what she had accomplished. As described in her autobiographical work To Be Young, Gifted and Black:</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8230;I had turned the last page out of the typewriter and pressed all the sheets neatly together in a pile, and gone and stretched out face down on the living room floor. I had finished a play; a play I had no reason to think or not think would ever be done; a play that I was sure no one would quite understand&#8230;</p></blockquote>
<p>Where did Lorraine Hansberry get the impetus to carry forward her vision through her writing? As Robert Nemiroff related it, she “had herself as a child been almost killed in such a real-life story”4 as the one depicted in her play.</p>
<p>In addition to these works, Ms. Hansberry also wrote another play, The Sign in Sidney Brustein’s Window, a novel Les Blancs, and Lorraine Hansberry: The Collected Last Plays, in addition to numerous magazine and newspaper articles, and other work in progress, left unfinished when she died. No matter how famous Ms. Hansberry became, though, and no matter how much she achieved during her brief lifetime, she never forgot her commitment to carrying forward her ideals to the young people who would follow her.</p>
<p>When she died, her ex-husband inscribed these lines from her Brustein play on her tombstone:</p>
<blockquote><p>I care. I care about it all. It takes too much energy not to care…the why of why we are here is an intrigue for adolescents; the how is what must command the living.</p></blockquote>
<h3>Historical Overview</h3>
<p>Into what milieu was Lorraine Hansberry born? What was America like when she was growing up? What experiences would she have had as a student? What was this country like when she reached adulthood?</p>
<p>In order to understand the historical background of A Raisin in the Sun, it is necessary to understand the impact of the United States Supreme Court’s 1954 Brown vs. Board of Education school desegregation decision. That law changed the previous &#8220;separate but equal&#8221; status of education in the South.</p>
<p>&#8220;Separate but equal&#8221; meant that until the 1954 ruling, black children and White children were separated into different schools. There were no exceptions to this segregationist policy. Also, public facilities such as parks, theaters, etc., had sections and utilities segregated by race. This was because of what were known as &#8220;Jim Crow laws,&#8221; which were not real laws, but local statutes which everyone followed.</p>
<div class="vid alignright"><br /><img src="http://i.ytimg.com/vi/R279NLNBfLI/0.jpg" alt="media" /><br />
</div>
<p>Until the Brown vs. Board of Education ruling and other civil rights activity in the 1950s, it was very dangerous for people of different races to be friends. Works of literature from that time, such as Strange Fruit by Lillian Smith, depict the outrageous injustice of that time.</p>
<p>In addition, any black person who challenged these Jim Crow statutes in any way was subject to abuse, arrest, or lynching (being hung by a lawless mob). Heroes such as the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and Mrs. Rosa Parks, however, challenged these Jim Crow laws and “separate but equal” protocols through boycotts, marches, and other nonviolent means, which often originated in black churches.</p>
<p>At the time Ms. Hansberry wrote A Raisin in the Sun, then, the country was being forced for the first time to truly put into practice Abraham Lincoln’s words in reference to the Civil War freeing the slaves about a century before:</p>
<blockquote><p>Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth, upon this continent, a new nation, conceived in liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that &#8220;all men are created equal.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>Even after the school desegregation ruling, however, it took quite some time for the schools in the South to be integrated. Children who tried to go to schools previously off-limits to them were harassed, humiliated, had rocks thrown at them, were set upon by dogs, and otherwise threatened and persecuted. Churches with predominantly black congregations were bombed, and church members, including children, were killed. Families who moved into previously all-white neighborhoods had crosses burned on their front lawns by the Ku Klux Klan and other hate groups, and were subject to being terrorized in many other ways.</p>
<p>This situation occurred mainly in the South, but the North was not that much better off when it came to these kinds of injustices; they were just more subtle. It has been said that one of Lorraine Hansberry’s purposes in writing A Raisin in the Sun was to show that things were not much better in the North in the 1950s than they were in the South.</p>
<p>Jewell Handy Gresham-Nemiroff said this of Hansberry’s vision:</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8230;She had to possess a powerful cosmic sense of the magnitude of human struggle in the modern world waged by ordinary men and women. Such battles against themselves and others, against wretchedness, and against fate she believed to be of comparable worth as dramatic material to the woes of ancient kings and queens in whom grave flaws of character led to disaster.</p></blockquote>


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		<title>This is a general test post</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Nov 2008 18:09:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Mr. Naymik</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Testing of stuff in this post
ote: This function will not work if it is called from a wp_head action, as the ote: This function will not work if it is called from a wp_head action, as the &#60;script&#62; tags are output before wp_head runs.  Instead, call wp_enqueue_script from an init action function (to load [...]


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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span class="sub-head">Testing of stuff in this post</span><br />
ote: This function will not work if it is called from a wp_head action, as the <strong>ote</strong>: This function will not work if it is called from a <tt>wp_head</tt> action, as the &lt;script&gt; tags are output before <tt>wp_head</tt> runs.  Instead, call <tt>wp_enqueue_script</tt> from an <tt>init</tt> action function (to load it in all pages), <tt>template_redirect</tt> (to load it in public pages only), or <tt>admin_print_scripts</tt> (for admin pages only). Do not use <tt>wp_print_scripts</tt> (<a rel="nofollow" title="http://wordpress.org/support/topic/169647" href="http://wordpress.org/support/topic/169647">see here for an explanation</a>).</p>
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<dd class="wp-caption-dd">ghjkh kh hkjh kjhkjhkjh kjhkj</dd>
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<p><strong>ote</strong>: This function will not work if it is called from a <tt>wp_head</tt> action, as the &lt;script&gt; tags are output before <tt>wp_head</tt> runs.  Instead, call <tt>wp_enqueue_script</tt> from an <tt>init</tt> action function (to load it in all pages), <tt>template_redirect</tt> (to load it in public pages only), or <tt>admin_print_scripts</tt> (for admin pages only). Do not usewp_print_scripts</p>
<p>tags are output before wp_head runs. Instead, call wp_enqueue_script from an init action function (to load it in all pages), template_redirect (to load it in public pages only), or admin_print_scripts (for admin pages only). Do not use wp_print_scripts (see here for an explanation). tags are output before wp_head runs. Instead, call wp_enqueue_script from an init action function (to load it in all pages), template_redirect (to load it in public pages only), or admin_print_scripts (for admin pages only). Do not use wp_print_scripts (see here for an explanation).</p>
<blockquote><p>tags are output before wp_head runs. Instead, call wp_enqueue_script from an init action function (to load it in all pages), template_redirect (to load it in public pages only), or admin_print_scripts (for admin pages only). Do not use wp_print_scripts (see here for an explanation).</p></blockquote>
<p>tags are output before wp_head runs. Instead, call wp_enqueue_script from an init action function (to load it in all pages), template_redirect (to load it in public pages only), or admin_print_scripts (for admin pages only). Do not use wp_print_scripts (see here for an explanation).</p>
<h1>heading number 1</h1>
<h2>heading number 2</h2>
<h3>heading number 3</h3>
<h4>heading number 4</h4>
<h5>heading number 5</h5>
<p>[myquiz quiz_id=1]</p>


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<li><a href='http://www.naymik.com/learn/us-lit-ii/active-vs-passive-voice/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: Active vs Passive Voice'>Active vs Passive Voice</a> <small>Active voice is usual the best way to write, as...</small></li>
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