Thursday, October 24, 2019
Black People and African American Actors Essay
ââ¬Å"We black men have a hard enough time in our own struggle for justice, and already have enough enemies as it is, to make the drastic mistake of attacking each other and adding more weight to an already unbearable load. â⬠(Malcolm X) African American men through time have struggled for a power that is out of their reach because others hold the power. August Wilsonââ¬â¢s Fences displays a Psychological/Psychoanalytic approach by illuminating the inherent injustice in Americaââ¬â¢s treatment of African American males and the ways in which this racism affects and invades the societal units ââ¬â the family. The conventional husband-wife and father-son conflicts are subservient to the plays discussion of racism. Fences is a drama that focuses on the characteristics of black life in a small neighbor in 1957 and the strains of society of the Maxson family. The play shows how the main character struggles against his oppressive past and his present surroundings, and when he tries to regain the power in his life, he fails, and ends up bringing down other with him. The protagonist, Troy Maxson is a restless trash-collector and former baseball player for the Negro League. In the play, Fences, Troyââ¬â¢s past dictates the kind of man he is today. His father, an abusive unsuccessful sharecropper, has had a major impact on Troy. Troy states, ââ¬Å"But Iââ¬â¢ll say this for himâ⬠¦he felt a responsibility toward us. â⬠(1310; all page references are to class text Literature an Introduction to Reading and Writing, 5th ed. ) This comment is the one good thing that Troy has to say about his father. Despite his fatherââ¬â¢s meanness, he did feel a sense of duty toward his family. After an incident with his father beating him unconscious, Troy left home at the age of fourteen (Wilson 1311). Leaving the oppressive rule of his father should have brought Troy a feeling of freedom, but Troy found the exact opposite. Troy found that there were no jobs or places for blacks to live so he began stealing to survive. He met a woman and got her pregnant with his first son. Lyons. The responsibility weighed on him because now he had two more mouths to feed (Wilson 1311). To take care of his family, he continued to steal which ended him jail for fifteen years and this is where he learned to play baseball. Troy Maxson was a great baseball player, at least according to his friend Bono. Although he played brilliantly for the ââ¬Å"Negro Leaguesâ⬠, by the time that blacks were allowed into the Major League Troy was too old. In Troyââ¬â¢s self-created illusion, he believes that he would have made it to the Major League if it were not for the color of his skin (Wilson 1292). Because he never earned the recognition or the money, which he felt he deserved, the discussion of professional sports will often send him into a tirade. In a discussion with Bono and Rose concerning Cory recruitment by a college football team, Troy states, ââ¬Å"Jackie Robinson wasnââ¬â¢t nobody. Iââ¬â¢m talking about if you could play ball then they ought to have let you play. Donââ¬â¢t care what color you were. â⬠(1. 1. 78). Troy points out the blatant racism that kept him from a career in the major leagues. He was just as good, if not better, than many of the white players, and yet he did not get a shot. Troy, now fifty-three, has long retired from baseball; he makes a living for himself and his family as a garbage man, and nurses his well-earned bitterness. His life has been warped by white racism, and in turn, Troy is helpless to keep himself from warping his sonââ¬â¢s life. Because of the racism, Troy has suffered in life and the tumultuous relationship with his father, Troy tries to control both is sonââ¬â¢s lives. Troy has a low expectation of what black men can do with their lives, and is holding his sons back from obtaining successes that Troy could only dream about obtaining. Lyons is ambitious talented jazz musician. Lyons jazz playing appears to Troy as an unconventional and foolish occupation. In the beginning of Fences, Lyons comes to Troy to borrow ten dollars because he girlfriend Bonnie has a job working at the hospital. In Troyââ¬â¢s mind, Lyon is failing in his duty as a man by not taking care of his woman. Troy lectures Lyons, ââ¬Å"I done learned my mistakes and learned to do whatââ¬â¢s right it. You still trying to get something for nothing. Life donââ¬â¢t owe you nothing. You owe it to yourself. â⬠(1. 1. 145). The quotation is an example of how Troy feels the black man will never amount to anything in the ââ¬Å"white manââ¬â¢s worldâ⬠. He also tries to control his son, Coryââ¬â¢s future because he see that he is going down the same road the Troy was on and was rejected from. Troy tells his wife Rose ââ¬Å"The white man ainââ¬â¢t gonna let him get nowhere with the football. â⬠(1. 1. 65). Through racial discrimination is still a huge problem in America during the 50s, things have gotten more equal, especially in the world of sports. Troy however is too stubborn and bitter to admit there has been some progress. Troy is now a fifty-three year old African American male who works for the sanitation department. Troy works to gain power as a man by changing his job situation. Troy goes to his boss, Mr. Rand and asks him ââ¬Å"Why? Why you got white mens driving and the colored lifting? â⬠(1. 1. 10). Troy sees this as oppression, though he knows that he has a job that is awarded to both white and black men, the racial line is till carefully drawn. He is determined to cross this line because he cannot handle any racial prejudices in his life. Troy continues to recount his fight with his boss to his long-time friend, Bono. Troy states, ââ¬Å"You think only white fellows got sense enough to drive a truck. That ainââ¬â¢t no paper job! â⬠(1. 1. 10). Troy feels that blacks are good enough to be drivers; he assumes that they would not be able to handle ââ¬Å"paperâ⬠or office jobs. This is another example of how racism is so entrenched that black people are a little racist against themselves. Troyââ¬â¢s characters sought after this job in order to gain back some of the power in his life, even though he does not have a license to drive. He is finally able to prove to himself and the people around him that he is worthy and just as good as any other man, including white men. As a father, Troy feels obligated to provide the necessities of life, but he seems to think his duties end there. During a discussion between Cory and Troy, when Cory asked he father, ââ¬Å"How come you never liked me? â⬠Troy replies, ââ¬Å"You live in my houseâ⬠¦sleep your behind on my bedclothesâ⬠¦fill you belly up with my foodâ⬠¦cause you my son. You my flesh and blood. Not cause I like you? Cause itââ¬â¢s my duty to take care you. â⬠(1. 3. 107). It is clear the legacy of racism threatens to take another generation. However, he was unable to provide for his family alone and had to use the tragic injuries of his brother, Gabriel, a World War II veteran. Troy uses this money to pay for his house. He says, ââ¬Å"If my brother didnââ¬â¢t have that metal plate in his headâ⬠¦I wouldnââ¬â¢t have a pot to piss in or a window to throw it out of. And Iââ¬â¢m fifty-three years old. â⬠(1. 2. 64). He feels weighed down by the guilt of using his brotherââ¬â¢s destruction as a way to jumpstart his own life. He feels like the only reason he has anything is the fact that his brother life was ruined. Through he has a loving relationship with his wife Rose, he still strays and finds a woman with which he feels he can be a different man. He uses this affair as a way to escape from the responsibility of his life and the constant reminders of his shortcomings as a man. When trying to explain why he had the affair he tells Rose, ââ¬Å"I can step out of this house and get away from the pressures and problemsâ⬠¦be a different man. I ainââ¬â¢t got to wonder how Iââ¬â¢m gonna pay the bills or get the roof fixed. I can just be a part of myself that I ainââ¬â¢t never been. â⬠(2. 1. 98). His affairs results in a baby, and he needs Rose to help him, after his mistress, Alberta, died. Rose accepts the responsibility of raising this child, but she has cut off all emotion bonds with Troy. Rose tells him ââ¬Å"Iââ¬â¢ll take care of you baby for youâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬â¢causeâ⬠¦ like you sayâ⬠¦sheââ¬â¢s innocentâ⬠¦and you canââ¬â¢t visit the sins of the father upon the child. From right nowâ⬠¦this child got a mother. But you a womanless man. â⬠(2. 3. 4). It is with this act that Troy loses more of his control and finds himself even more emasculated than before. Troy was unable to see that he did have control over one aspect of his life, yet he was too worried about proving his worth to others and to himself, that he proved his unworthiness to his own wife. Troy is a resentful victim of his lifeââ¬â¢s circumstances, a man who has become fenced in from happiness by the conviction that he was never paid what he was owed in any right: not from his father, not from his former baseball career, not from his employers, and not from his family. Troy tried to take back the power that was taken from him by demanding that his loved ones live practical, responsible lives while he has the freedom to have an affair, rebel against racist practices of his employers by protesting the limitation of black workers as lifters not drivers on the trash trucks. Troy refuses to see life in any presented to him but the way he perceives events in his own head. Eventually, Troyââ¬â¢s death leaves many negative attributes an inheritance for his family to sort out and accept. Fences I. INTRODUCTION (4-6 sentences) A. Quote B. Thesis Sentenceââ¬âThe play illuminate the inherent injustice in the Americaââ¬â¢s treatment of black men and the ways in which this racism affects and invades the family. 1. The conflicts in the play show has racism affected the family. 2. Set in 1957 after World War II when blacks still are fighting for power. 3. Shows how the characters struggle against his oppressive past and present, and when he tries to regain power he fails and brings down others around him. II. BODY (minimum of three paragraphs) A. 1st Supporting Paragraph (8-12 sentences) 1. Topic Sentenceââ¬âTroyââ¬â¢s past dictates the kind of man he is today a. Subject ââ¬â The ways he was raised b. Focus ââ¬â why he left home and what he did when he left home 2. 1st Subtopic Sentenceââ¬âHis father was an abusive unsuccessful sharecropper 2nd Subtopic Sentenceââ¬âleft home at an early age and landed in jail. 3. Concluding Sentenceââ¬â uneducated black man did what he had to do to serve. B. 2nd Supporting Paragraph (8-12 sentences) 1. Topic Sentenceââ¬âTroyââ¬â¢s injustice dealing with his career a. Subjectââ¬âLost opportunity due to racism towards blacks in sports b. Focusââ¬â why is lost his opportunity to be the man he thought he was supposed to be and how he handles it 2. 1st Subtopic Sentenceââ¬â during that time blacks were only allowed to play in the Negro League. 2nd Subtopic Sentenceââ¬âAny talk about sports through Troy into a tirade. 3. Concluding Sentenceââ¬âBecause of the oppression that was placed on him, it causes he to oppress others dreams C. 3rd Supporting Paragraph (8-12 sentences) 1. Topic Sentenceââ¬âThe affect his past has on him and sons a. Subjectââ¬âTroyââ¬â¢s low expectation for options that the black man has in a career b. Focusââ¬âHe holds his sons back from realizing their dreams 2. 1st Subtopic Sentenceââ¬âThinks he son Lyon is wasting his life by not accepting a job that is thought as acceptable in the white man world 2nd Subtopic Sentenceââ¬âDoes not want his son Cory to follow in footsteps as an athlete because of how he was treated. 3. Concluding Sentenceââ¬âTroy is too stubborn and bitter to admit there have been changes since his time concerning treatment of black athletes D. 4th Supporting Paragraph (8-12 sentences) 1. Topic Sentenceââ¬âHis job and racism a. Subjectââ¬âWhites has the better job in the sanitation department b. Focusââ¬âTries to change his job situation 2. 1st Subtopic Sentenceââ¬âTroy goes to his boss and confronts him about the racism at work 2nd Subtopic Sentenceââ¬âTroy himself is racist toward other blacks 3. Concluding Sentenceââ¬âTroy is able to prove to himself and family that is worthy and as a good as any white man. E. 5th Supporting Paragraph (8-12 sentences) 1. Topic Sentenceââ¬âResponsibilities as a father a. Subjectââ¬âTroy believes that a father is only supposed to provide for his family b. Focusââ¬âhow he goes about it 2. 1st Subtopic Sentenceââ¬âTells he son that he doesnââ¬â¢t have to love him he just has to make sure that he has a roof over his head 2nd Subtopic Sentenceââ¬âProvides for his family by using his brother 3. Concluding Sentenceââ¬â F. 5th Supporting Paragraph (8-12 sentences) 1. Topic Sentenceââ¬âThe effect it has on him relationship with his wifea. Subjectââ¬âhas an affair b. Focusââ¬âblames his responsibilities on his affair 2. 1st Subtopic Sentenceââ¬âTells his wife that he now choice but to cheat because of the things he has to do to make a life for his family 2nd Subtopic Sentenceââ¬âLoses he wife 3. Concluding Sentenceââ¬âis further emasculated III. CONCLUSION (3-4 sentences) A. Troy is a victim of life: his father, his dead career, his job and family all play are part B. Troy tries to control his life but the decision he makes lead him to be more oppressed then he was before. He is stuck in the past and cannot move forward with his life. His death continues the cycle. Ã
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