In class, we learned that August Wilson, the author of Fences, wrote a different play about African American culture for each decade of the 20th century. Fences is his play about the 1950s, the decade of the “calm before the storm” of the full-blown Civil Rights Movement. The story centers on Troy, a man who was born in the late eighteen hundreds and has seen his fair share of hard times. He is stubborn, has questionable morals (e.g. when he cheats on his wife, Rose, with Alberta), and is extremely resistant to change. To be honest, I found myself strongly disliking Troy as the play progressed. So my question is, why would Wilson choose Troy to be a representation of African American culture in the 1950s? Why, of all the archetypes he could have chosen, would Wilson discuss the life of a bitter man?
I think that part of the answer lies in Troy’s resistance to change. He represents the “in between” generation that came after the Civil War, but before the Civil Rights Movement. Much like today’s adults’ unwillingness to learn how to text message, Troy is unable and reluctant to acknowledge the changing social climate. Troy’s resistance is demonstrated through his dealings with his son, Cory. Cory is growing up in a world that is beginning to desegregate, a world that is just beginning to give opportunities, like football scholarships, to African Americans. Troy is completely against Cory’s accepting the scholarship and refuses to sign the form. Not only is Troy incapable of accepting the fact that times are changing, but he is also bitter that he was not given the same opportunities as Cory is receiving (although his won’t admit it).
Rose is the voice of reason in the play. She points out to Troy that times are changing, that Cory’s scholarship is legitimate, that Troy should allow Cory to play. She represents the realist, the older person who can see that, as Bob Dylan would say, “the times they are a’changing.” Furthermore, Troy’s downfall ultimately occurs when he turns his back on Rose (by sleeping with Alberta), demonstrating the stabilizing force she provides.
But enough about the story itself. Let’s talk about Sandy Koufax. He was mentioned in the play and his name struck a chord in my memory because I have always heard that he was my dad’s hero growing up. As a little baseball-playing Jewish boy, my dad was kind of obsessed with Koufax (even though he was quite young when Koufax retired in 1966). My dad grew up on stories of the Brooklyn-born Jewish pitcher who was named World Series MVP in 1963 when the Dodger’s beat the Yankees in only four games. Sandy Koufax, the sixth pitcher of the modern era to throw a perfect game, was the inspiration for my dad, a little boy in Woodland Hills, California, to throw his first baseball. So what does this have to do with Fences? Admittedly, not much. But I think it goes to demonstrate the importance of baseball in Troy’s life. I personally am not an avid baseball fan so I had problems relating to that part of the story. But after talking to Daddy Motzkin about it, I was able to appreciate Troy’s obsession with baseball, and thus the story itself, a little more.
Monday, March 10, 2008
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7 comments:
Lauren,
Nice post!
What a smart question you pose about why Wilson centers the story upon Troy and what his character represents on the larger stage of time, place, and culture.
I also found your contrast between Troy and Rose intriguing: resistance to inevitability vs. accepting the tides of change. However, I feel that Rose, to some extent, resists change - although in a much more passive manner than does Troy: she subconsciously resists the evolved reality of her life during the eight years of her degrading marriage...
Very apt use of the Dylan lyric.
Again, great post.
-Emily
What a coincidence! My dad was also, at one point, a little Jewish boy playing baseball!
Troy's resistance to change is almost pathological. He did have a number of traumatic events in his life. I'm fairly certain he has an entirely warped perception of reality.
I counter your Dylan lyric with a Third Eye Blind lyric:
You say that I changed, and maybe I did--but even if I changed, what's wrong with it?
Nice post, Ren.
Lyrics? What about giving a shout out to the Eagles song (written by Glenn Frey and, according to allmusic guide, released on no fewer than 189 albums by dozens of different artists, my favorite being Tucson's own Linda Ronstadt) Desperado, from which you took the title of your post?
Lorenzo!
I too disliked Troy more and more as the story went on. Also, I liked the random facts about your dad and the baseball player. :)
Michele
Great post! I really like the way you examined the play within the context of the time period's social atmosphere. I felt a bit more sympathy for Troy upon reading your description of him as a typical adult that has become set in his ways.
I also liked your anecdote about Sandy Koufax :)
Lauren,
Thanks for making me rethink my original impression of Troy. I thought your line, " Much like today’s adults’ unwillingness to learn how to text message, Troy is unable and reluctant to acknowledge the changing social climate," neatly summerized how Troy fits into the heated dynamic of the play.
Great job,
As usual, your blog is always insightful and entertaining :)
On this day I must bid my aristocratic counterparts farewell. I shall not go into detail of what has driven me to such action, but it was the topic of Gary’s speech. I have authored a brief, might you say, rebuttal, which can be read here.
Jane Austen (48)
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