History
History, 02.08.2019 09:30, alexabrandon1848

Why did mama avoid buying a house in an area designated for colored people?

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English, 24.06.2019 22:10, vrybascos
Hurry read the two passages from a raisin in the sun. passage 1: lindner: you see—in the face of all the things i have said, we are prepared to make your family a very generous offer . . beneatha: thirty pieces and not a coin less! lindner (putting on his glasses and drawing a form out of the briefcase): our association is prepared, through the collective effort of our people, to buy the house from you at a financial gain to your family. ruth: lord have mercy, ain't this the living gall! walter: all right, you through? lindner: well, i want to give you the exact terms of the financial arrangement— walter: we don't want to hear no exact terms of no arrangements. i want to know if you got any more to tell us 'bout getting together? lindner (taking off his glasses): well—i don't suppose that you feel . . walter: never mind how i feel—you got any more to say 'bout how people ought to sit down and talk to each other? . . get out of my house, man. passage 2: walter: ain't nothing the matter with us. we just telling you 'bout the gentleman who came to see you this afternoon. from the clybourne park improvement association. mama: what he want? ruth (in the same mood as beneatha and walter): to welcome you, honey. walter: he said they can't hardly wait. he said the one thing they don't have, that they just dying to have out there is a fine family of fine colored people! (to ruth and beneatha.) ain't that right! ruth (mockingly): yeah! he left his card— beneatha (handing card to mama): in case. mama reads and throws it on the floor—understanding and looking off as she draws her chair up to the table on which she has put her plant and some sticks and some cord. mama: father, give us strength. (knowingly—and without fun.) did he threaten us? beneatha: oh—mama—they don't do it like that anymore. he talked brotherhood. he said everybody ought to learn how to sit down and hate each other with good christian fellowship. she and walter shake hands to ridicule the remark. mama (sadly): lord, protect us . . ruth: you should hear the money those folks raised to buy the house from us. all we paid and then some. beneatha: what they think we going to do—eat 'em? ruth: no, honey, marry 'em. mama (shaking her head): lord, lord, lord . . which lines of dialogue develop the idea that racially charged confrontations can have a sudden and unpleasant impact? select three options. "i don't suppose that you feel" "ain’t this the living gall! " "they don't do it like that anymore." “all we paid and then some.” "lord, lord, lord . ."
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English, 23.09.2019 01:00, mckennacwilliams
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