After being the center of attention in his family and social circles, Troy Maxson gradually changes into an alone, unwanted, and terrified man. Troy Maxson always wants to run away from life, yet despite this, he strives to engage in it and fight Death because, despite how illusory they may be, he has faith in himself and his beliefs. Troy starts off by calling out his staff for engaging in discriminating behavior. He then boasts to his family members and best friend Bono about his lack of fear of death while also keeping a secret about his relationship with Alberta which he believes he can get away with. Troy feels bigger and better when he taunts Lyons, his other son than when he demands respect from Cory, his son. When his fears, his rage, …show more content…
Troy struggles with self-doubt due to his unfulfilling existence and the difficulties he had while supporting himself and his family. Troy's death is a result of a combination of bad luck, racism in society, and his own past deeds coming back to haunt him. Troy was born into a large, impoverished household with just an abusive yet devoted father to provide for them. When he had to leave his father's home without any means, he ended up in jail because he committed little crimes to get by. Troy picked up the game of baseball while incarcerated and found that he was one of the top home run batters in the Negro Leagues. However, black athletes were not allowed to play in the Major Leagues, which paid considerably, when Troy was at his best. Troy joins the sanitation department after being unable to provide for his family. Despite putting in a lot of effort, he is unable to advance because of discrimination in the union's hiring …show more content…
Troy had already spent fifteen years in prison for killing a guy before he met Rose. The man shot Troy as Troy sought to rob him. Troy killed him with a knife as a form of retaliation.“They told me I killed him and they put me in the penitentiary and locked me up for fifteen years. That’s where I met Bono. That’s where I learned how to play baseball.” (Wilson 1153). Troy claims that he feels bad about what he did and is embarrassed by it. He had intended to play in the top leagues after learning the game in prison, but he was denied the chance due to his race. He's become a bitter guy after years of bearing the burden of this injustice. He believed that since he had been denied this chance, his kids, especially Cory, shouldn't have the same chance in football. He was furious about everything sports-related because of the
Although, Wilson emphasizes this journey with Troy who believe that racial boundaries prevented him from being a major in baseball. He wanted to show that education is more valuable than sports. Troy felt that Corry could reach his true potential of becoming someone educated. He believes that his role as father to keep a roof over his family head. Troy doesn't realize how he became a bully pushing his family and friends around.
It was also because of the struggles they had through their generations of oppression. In the play Troy’s son, Cory, wants to play baseball however Troy believes Cory will be discriminated against like Troy was. “Papa done went up to the school and told Coach Zellman I can't play football no more.. Just cause you didn't have a chance! You just scared I'm gonna be better than you, that's all."
The protagonist of the novel is Troy Maxson, a fifty-three year-old, African American who works for the sanitation department. Troy used to play baseball in the Negro Leagues. As soon as the Major Leagues started to accept blacks, Troy’s athletic ability began to degrade. Wilson symbolically gives the last name Maxson to Troy, because that was the name of the line that divided the north and the south during the civil war era. In addition, Troy’s name represent those who lived on the line between two contrasting viewpoints.
70) Troy’s only way of really expressing himself is through baseball as a metaphor in order to try and explain what is on his mind. Baseball is his way of expressing what's on his mind, but the people around him do not understand what he is trying to say. This causes there to be a lack of understanding and communication and it leads to Troy damaging connections with the people around
Troy Maxson is an African American man who has a wife and three kids who is raising a family in the middle of 1957. Being an African American during the 1957’s was hard due to the racism and the judgement. Troy wants to be closer to his family but never does due to his arrogant and aggressive ways. In a way, Troy was like a baby bird. He was pushed out of his nest young and lived through many struggles.
Troy tries to use baseball metaphors to explain why he cheated on her. He said “I just might be able to steal second. Eighteen years I’ve been wanting to steal second” (70). In order to try to explain himself, Troy uses baseball analogies. This doesn’t do much for Troy’s defense, but it shows us what Troy does when he’s put in a corner.
This meant that all professional baseball teams were still not for black people from playing. In fences, the troy character is very negative just because, he suffered in his past. In Fences, August Wilson shows that troy is a villain because he is unfair to his wife, wants to control everyone, and mean with his son. In the fences, August describe how Troy is a villain because of the unfair to his wife.
The way Troy had a bad experience with sport baseball and what he went through in the past is what developed his character in the book “Fences”. In the beginning of the book we get introduced to a character named Troy and he is a father and husband; we also get told that he used to play baseball growing up and how he only grew up with a father who in his words was “so evil”; for a short period of time before he moved out on his own. Troy is African American and with him being African American and growing up during a racist time he didn’t get very far with baseball and because of that it spun his life in a spiral and he’s never forgotten about it. In the beginning of Fences Troy is talking to Bono and Rose and Bono brings up Troy’s son Corey playing football and even having a recruiter coming to check him out.
Troy’s inability to commit to building his fences despite his repetitive speaking of how he is going to finish his fence shows how his isolation from his wife stems from his inability to truly commit to his wife even though he always told her he loved her. He wanted to protect his wife from the truth that he cheated on her and has a baby on the way with her but the fence prevented true communication with his own wife. Troy's inability to see the change in civil rights during his time period because of the fence led to the isolation of his mindset towards African American rights and the straining of his relationship with his son. His struggle to be accepted into playing professional sports alongside white men lead to preventing his son from playing professional football despite the changing times in civil rights. Without isolation from change, his relationship with his son could possibly be a happy one.
He persistently criticizes and neglects his two sons, which thus draws them away from him. Troy pushes Lyons away by refusing to hear him play his "Chinese music". He also scars hisrelationship with his other son, Cory, by preventing him from playing football and rejecting his onlychance to get recruited by a college football team. Also, Troy states that Cory's things will "be on theother side of that fence" when he kicks Cory to the street. Through this scene Troyacknowledges the fence as an actual, physical divide between him and his son.
Troy 's hatred of his father acts as a catalyst for many moments in Troy 's life, in negative and positive ways alike. Unlike most fathers, Troy 's father didn 't leave him with a material possession such as a house but instead left him with emotional baggage that crippled the earlier and later parts of Troy 's life. From the beginning, Troy 's father was abusive to his mother and all of his siblings. Troy and his family worked hard on their father 's farm and endured his bitterness towards being a sharecropper. Troy states that his father was greedy and would put his own personal needs above the needs of the family.
Troy not only disapproves of his son Cory playing football, but he also disagrees with his oldest son Lyons aspirations of becoming a musician. We see this when Troy states “get recruited in how to fix cars or something where he can make a living”. Instead of focusing on sports, he believes Cory should pick up a trade that can provide an income for his future. Cory is a talented athlete just like his dad, but due to Troy’s dreams being shattered by the white man, his outlook is tainted. Although Troy is predominantly aggressive, he is attempting to protect Cory from the same disappointment he once endured.
Troy chose to escape his reality by having an affair that gives him some laughs and good time every now and then. However, despite the flaws in Troy’s character, he was a providing family man who wants to insure a better life of his sons than the one he had. Based on the play’s time period, which took place at the 50’s, apparently the main problem of Troy Maxson’s character was racism against African Americans at the time that had prevented him from achieving his dreams. Throughout the play, Troy expresses his dissatisfaction in several scenes with the other characters.
The play describes the life of Troy Maxson a middle age Africa-American man who was raising his family in time of racism. Troy is married to Rose and the father of three children. Troy has two sons Lyons and Cory, and a daughter named Raynell. August Wilson describes the life of Troy as someone who feels he is being oppressed and how different the culture was when his was a child growing up compared to his children’s lives.
Another metaphorical fence that Troy faces is built strong with racial stigmas. His childhood dream was to become a professional baseball player, but he could not make it to the big leagues due to his race and