Lack Of Discrimination In Fences

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When a person is treated unfairly they have two choices when it comes to deciding how they will let this mistreatment shape their futures: they can either move past it and continue to push towards their goal, or they can let it knock them down and make them bitter. The main character of August Wilson 's Fences, Troy, chooses to do the later. After being unfairly discriminated against throughout his childhood, his baseball career, and his job, Troy becomes resentful and chooses to use this as an excuse to not respect anyone else in his life, and the lack of respect that he has for his family drives the entire play.
From the setting of this play, readers can already assume that Troy has been disrespect and mistreated throughout his entire life …show more content…

For no apparent reason, other than their skin color, the blacks that work on the garbage trucks are not allowed to drive the trucks, and Troy takes this very personally. However, this is the one time that Troy decides to truly fight back against the people who have wronged him, and he eventually gets the promotion that he wants. But up until the point of the promotion, Troy takes out his anger toward the employers on his family, especially his wife Rose. Each evening when he arrives home from work he berates her by telling her “This is men talk, woman.” (Wilson, 967). He is so focused on his troubles that he does not choose to show his wife any of the respect that she deserves. And when she asks him to give her his wages so that she can pay the household bills, he acts as though she is stealing it from him. Although he knows that he would just blow all of it away if he did not give it to her, he still chooses to act like she is doing him a disservice. After being disrespected so much in his life, Troy thinks that he is being further degraded by not being allowed to control the household funds. This shows the vicious cycle that he has put himself

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