The Common Misconception Of Gender Roles In August Wilson's Fences

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The Common Misconception of Gender Roles
As history shows, society often overlooks women. The female role is made to appear less significant or less effective than that of a man in. Society instills this idea through the correlation of men as the typical providers of the family, thus allowing them to assume the role of figurehead of the home. The primary reason men once made the sole income for their families was due to the fact that businesses would not hire females (up until the late 1950’s) because their sex deemed them unqualified. In August Wilson’s “Fences,” the main character, Troy Maxson, rushes through life, brainwashed by a construed conception of his burdensome gender-assumed duty to society and his family; in his mind, he sees a goal: …show more content…

Like a flower growing in a garden, Rose nurtures and enriches her family with care and love and attention while Troy recklessly treats life as a game of achievement. Rose demonstrates vitality of women in African American societies, for she utilizes power in family with her instinctive inclination to fully deliver herself.
Through marriage, Rose experiences a change in identity for her family. With the vows of marriage, she binds herself to Troy; her life completely shifts form to evolve from a powerless, single woman to a devoted wife. For a young woman in the 1950’s, marriage signified a lifelong commitment to her husband. African American women lacked access to education and jobs, so “marriage was . . . considered [the] best investment in long-term security” for these women (Shannon 154). They sought promising men. Family provided one of the only small successes black women could have. Dazzled by the idea of a family and pure love, Rose “took all [her] . . . wants and needs [and] dreams” and “buried them inside” of Troy in desperate hope of growing a family; Rose is readily aware that “the only way [she would] survive [is] as [Troy’s] wife” (Wilson

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