Baseball as a Plot and a Metaphor: The play, Fences by August Wilson

901 Words2 Pages

Baseball is America’s pastime. The sport of baseball goes back all the way to civil war era, 1839. August Wilson saw the potential this sport had to send a message, and incorporated it into his play Fences. His collection of ten plays portrays the hardships of African Americans for every decade of the twentieth century (Wilson 961). Fences, in particular portrays the nineteen fifties (Wilson 961). When one reads Fences, yes it is about the struggle of African Americans in the time period, but it also incorporates baseball as multiple plot elements, and a metaphor for life.
The play, “Fences” by August Wilson describes the life of an African-American family that is por. Troy Maxson, the father of the family, was a baseball player in the Negro League but never made it to the Majors League. The play is about Troy’s struggle with his children and wife. He has a son named Lyons who doesn’t live with the family but still begs Troy for money. Troy’s main trouble is with his son Cory. Cory wants to become a football player but Troy disagrees. Cory gave up his job and school studies to focus on football but Troy doesn’t like this and he kicks him out of the house. During all of this, Troy is dealing with racial prejudice at his work. His boss will not allow blacks to drive the garbage trucks, but after Troy’s pleading, his boss allows him to drive the truck and he becomes the first black man to drive a truck in the entire city of Pittsburgh. Cory leaves the house and doesn’t return until 8 years later when his father dies. August Wilson wrote this play because he wanted to show the racial tensions as well as the family tensions he experienced while he was a kid.

Metaphors are an important part of any story. In this particular story, Fe...

... middle of paper ...

..., can be used to teach others of things they might not be aware of. “Once in rear while, you come across a play…that seems to break away from the confines of an art into a dense, complex realization of humanity. A veil has been torn aside…” (Barnes 1019). Fences is a story that can accomplish this, using baseball as a plot element, and a metaphor for life.

Works Cited

Barnes, Clive. “Fiery Fences: A Review.” New York Post 27 March 1987: C23. Print.
Koprince, Susan. “Baseball as History and Myth in August Wilson’s Fences.” African American Review 40.3 (2006): 349-58. Print
Richards, Lloyds. Director’s Introduction. Fences: A Play. By August Wilson. New York: New American Library, 1986. vii-viii. Print
Wilson, August. " Fences." Approaching Literature Reading, Thinking, Writing. 3rd Ed. Peter Schakel, Jack Ridl. Boston: Bedford St.Martin’s, 2012. 959-1018. Print.

More about Baseball as a Plot and a Metaphor: The play, Fences by August Wilson

Open Document