Fences Troy Character Analysis

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The play “Fences” by August Wilson is set in a time when African Americans are coming out of the clasps of slavery and seeking a new life. There are many new opportunities in the job market as well as in the sports world. In the play the main character and father, Troy, is put into many controversial two-sided situations. He evaluates them from what he thinks is just and only uses his perspective, not heeding anyone else’s advice. In doing so he contributes to the rising action of the story where Troy refuses to let his son, Cory, play football when everyone else thinks it is a good idea. Troy thinks it will lead him on a path to nowhere because of his past experiences but doesn’t acknowledge how times have changed since he was younger. When Troy was young his father treated both him and his mother wrong. Cheating on his mother and abusing Troy was nothing out of the ordinary. Troy states that his father, “cared nothing about no kids…and when it come to eating… he ate first” (Act 1, Scene 4, 556). It’s ironic how the dialogue later in the play between Troy and Cory depicts a similar situation. Cory says; “How come you ain’t never liked me?” (Act 1, Scene 3, 550) and Troy responds; ‘Liked you? Who the hell say I got to like you?...Wanna stand up in my face and ask a damn fool-ass question like that” (Act 1, Scene 3, 550). Apparently, like his father, Troy doesn’t care about his kids. According to Joseph Wessling, “despite eventually running away from all of this [his father’s abuse], Troy still carried with him his father's virtues along with a considerable lessening of his father's harshness and promiscuity” (Wessling). He became a duplicate of his father, cheating on Rose with Alberta and not treating Cory fairly. Even though he was treated harshly he learned to respect his father’s legacy like Rose and Cory did for him. Troy says this about his father; “But I'll say this for him ... he felt a responsibility toward us. ... he could have walked off and left us ... made his own way” (Act 1, Scene 4, 556). Troy also showed this attribute of his father’s. He could have easily left his family and had it better off but he knew it was his “responsibility… A man got to take care of his family” (Act 1, Scene 3, 551). Although Troy was loyal to supporting his family, it by no means he was the best decision maker, especially after following in his father’s footsteps of adultery and

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