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The Role Of Troy The Tragic Hero In August Wilson's Fences

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In the play, Fences, by August Wilson, Troy Maxson, an African American, still struggles over what he has been through, not getting equal rights as white people. He is still living in the past and is not accepting the fact that the world is changing for the better. Troy is a harsh person, he is very strict, but he wants what is best for his family. Troy Maxson could have been a great baseball player but was not because of racism, yet that did not stop him from fighting against it and thus he can be considered a tragic hero. Troy was an astonishing baseball player. He could have gone far into his career, he was one of the best players “ain’t but two men ever played baseball as good as [him]”(9). Although he was a great player, racial discrimination prevented him from playing. Troy would be benched the entire game and not allowed to play. This had a great impact on him and the way he raises his children. He does not allow them to play sports because he does not want the same thing to happen to them as it did to Troy. …show more content…
Like Troy, his father was a sturdy man that made a lot of mistakes. His father was not the most loyal and caring person. While Troy was with a girl, his father got mad and started beating him. He did not know why his father was furious until he realized “he [wanted] the gal to himself’’(52). Troy stood up to his father, and started beating him. At the age of fourteen, he left his house, and lived on his own until he met Rose. He would steal food and money for him and his family. One night as he was robbing a man, he pulled out a gun and shot Troy. Troy immediately killed the man as self defense. From that point on, Troy does not let anything get in the way of what he

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