A Raisin in the Sun is basically about dreams, as the primary characters battle to manage the abusive circumstances that control their lives. The title of the play references something that Langston Hughes broadly talked about in a poem he wrote on dreams that were overlooked or put off. He talks about whether those fantasies shrivel up "like a raisin in the sun." Every individual from the Younger family has a different, individual dream—Benny wants to wind up in the medical field, Walter wants to have cash with the goal that he can support his family. He plans to open up a liquor store and use that money to help sustain his family. The Youngers battle to accomplish these dreams all throughout the play, and quite