Troy+Maxson

=All About Troy:  = ===//Add a favorite line of dialogue or a particular description and explain why you find it striking (arranged in chronological order). Please cite page numbers for easy reference. Be sure to include your name://  ===


<span style="COLOR: rgb(39,2,2)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(20,0,3)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,6,9)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(14,6,11)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(16,5,5); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(12,3,3)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,2,2)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(163,15,15); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(0,15,3)">

<span style="COLOR: rgb(202,22,22)">"Death ain't nothing. I done seen him. Done wrassled with him. You can't tell me nothign about death. Death ain't nothing but a fastball on the outside corner" (I.i.pg10). With that line, Troy was initially portrayed as a strong, fearless man who compares death to something as easy to hit as "a fastball on the outside corner". However, as I go on to read the play, I realize that Troy was actually denying various disappointing aspects in his life (baseball, affair, poverty...). This dialogue with Bono and Rose suggests that Troy believe himself to be a superior figure in his self-created illusion, which will eventually lead to his tragic ending as he loses control of his life and loses the people who love him. --       <span style="COLOR: rgb(20,0,3)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,6,9)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(14,6,11)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(16,5,5); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(12,3,3)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,2,2)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(163,15,15); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(39,2,2)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(20,0,3)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,6,9)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(14,6,11)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(16,5,5); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(12,3,3)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,2,2)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(163,15,15); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(0,15,3)">Jacky <span style="COLOR: rgb(20,0,3)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,6,9)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(14,6,11)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(16,5,5); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(12,3,3)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,2,2)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(163,15,15); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(39,2,2)"> <span style="COLOR: rgb(20,0,3)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,6,9)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(14,6,11)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(16,5,5); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(12,3,3)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,2,2)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(163,15,15); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(8,7,7)"> <span style="COLOR: rgb(4,28,200)">"Liked you? Who the hell say I got to like you? what law is there say I got to like you? (pg 37) I think this line shows the audience the harsh nature of Troy's personality. By Troy directly admitting to his own flesh and blood that he did not love him and that the only reason he took care of him was because it was his responsibility. Unlike almost any parent in this world, Troy actually seems almost completely devoid of any affection for his own son and feels that raising him is more of an obligation than out of any real feelings of love.       --<span style="COLOR: rgb(20,0,3)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,6,9)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(14,6,11)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(16,5,5); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(12,3,3)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,2,2)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(163,15,15); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(8,7,7)">Roy <span style="COLOR: rgb(20,0,3)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,6,9)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(14,6,11)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(16,5,5); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(12,3,3)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,2,2)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(163,15,15); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(39,2,2)"> <span style="COLOR: rgb(8,7,7)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(58,41,245); FONT-FAMILY: 'Comic Sans MS',cursive"> <span style="FONT-FAMILY: Impact,Charcoal,sans-serif; BACKGROUND-COLOR: rgb(20,255,0)">**"**The man aint got to know my business. Time he find out, I have two or three driver's license." (pg 46) This line shows the racial tension during the 1950's. Troy does not think that he owes it to his white employer to be honest because he wants to earn more money in a better job and he thinks that the //white man// is not going to help him at all so he has to take control. This point of view shows the narrow mindedness of Troy who cant get past racism and also reflects where society as a whole was during this decade. Troys willingness to break the rules is ironic because of the high expectations he puts on Corey and the rest of his family. <span style="COLOR: rgb(20,0,3)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,6,9)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(14,6,11)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(16,5,5); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(12,3,3)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,2,2)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(163,15,15); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(8,7,7)">--       <span style="COLOR: rgb(20,0,3)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,6,9)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(14,6,11)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(16,5,5); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(12,3,3)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,2,2)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(163,15,15); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(39,2,2)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(8,7,7)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(58,41,245); FONT-FAMILY: 'Comic Sans MS',cursive">**Andrew** <span style="FONT-FAMILY: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif"> This line reveals Troy’s refusal to heed the advice of anyone but his own. According to him, he only needs to base his judgment on what “sets right in [his] heart”. He claims that his heart will tell him “right from wrong every time”. As a result, Troy’s tendency to order other characters to follow his whims is demonstrated throughout the play, such as when his “heart” tells him Cory should be working at the A&P, rather than playing football and going to college. Unfortunately, his heart, which he claims to always separate right from wrong, convinces him to have an affair, an undeniably wrong decision. --<span style="FONT-FAMILY: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif"> Angus <span style="COLOR: rgb(14,6,11)"> <span style="COLOR: rgb(14,6,11); FONT-FAMILY: 'Comic Sans MS',cursive">
 * “As long as it sets right in my heart… then I’m okay. Cause that’s all I listen to. It’ll tell me right from wrong every time.” (II.i.63) **
 * "I can sit up in her house and laugh. Do you understand what I'm saying. I can laugh out loud... and it feels good. It reaches all the way down to the bottom of my shoes. Rose, I can't give that up."**

I found this quote to be striking because it shows us how selfish Troy can be. Troy is telling Rose about his affair with Alberta. Instead of leaving Alberta, Troy decides to stay and justifies his decision by telling Rose about how he "feels good" when hes with her. He completely ignores the fact that Rose and him are in the same relationship and suffers the same problems as Troy yet she is able to stay committed to their marriage. Although Troy is the character that drives the play, in a sense Rose is a much stronger character. --<span style="COLOR: rgb(14,6,11); FONT-FAMILY: 'Comic Sans MS',cursive"> Jimmy

<span style="COLOR: rgb(240,15,15)">"There ought not never have been no time called too early!" This quote is quite important to me because it shows how stubborn and selfish Troy is. He only thinks about himself, and he can't get over the fact that he was rejected by Major League Baseball. This quote shows his immaturity about life and the fact that he said "there shouldn't be a time called too early" makes him childish because he only wants it for himself and he seems like hes oblivious to the world due to his selfishness. Troy believes himself as the best and because of this thought that stays in his head, it eventually leads to many irrevocable mistakes later on in the story. --Jerome


 * "I stood on first base for eighteen years and I thought...well, goddamn it...go on for it!" --pg 70**

In this statement, Troy's unreasonable character is displayed. When Troy is trying to explain the reason for the affair with Alberta, he parallels his decision with baseball. His reference to "first base", which is evidently directed towards baseball, shows the extent at which Troy lives in a self-illusioned world. This unrealistic justification implies that Troy is impractical and living in a fantasy world. Unlike Rose, who is realistic and pragmatic, Troy seems to be just the opposite. --Vickie

<span style="COLOR: rgb(250,23,15)"> " You say I take and don't give! [...] You say I take and dont give. [...] I done give you everything I got. Don't you tell that lie on me ( 2.1 pg71) <span style="COLOR: rgb(16,5,5); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,2,2)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(163,15,15); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(190,14,14)">    <span style="COLOR: rgb(16,5,5); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,2,2)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(163,15,15); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(190,14,14)"> Troy has done a good job supporting the family. He devotes his time and energy to earn a living for the family--he has being doing so for 18 whole years, and there's no way to deny that he still is doing so....---But we see a lot more than that. We see he chose to have this relationship with Alberta; We see that he told lies every little while; we see that he denied his boys-not giving them a chance to going into those aspects he disapproves the chances to success. We see that he is way too far from "a perfect man" while Rose erases her doubts on this. But Troy doesn't see those we can see. He hasn't realized that everyone is doing something all the time, not just him. He is not a bad character just because of those-- it's just that sometimes he can't see what is going on. It's how he brought up that influenced his way of being and doing.<span style="COLOR: rgb(16,5,5); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,2,2)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(163,15,15); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(190,14,14)"> --   Linda: <span style="COLOR: rgb(20,0,3)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,6,9)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(14,6,11)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(16,5,5); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(12,3,3)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,2,2)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(163,15,15); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(8,7,7)"> <span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; COLOR: rgb(240,5,5); FONT-FAMILY: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif">“Alright…Mr. Death. See now…I’m gonna tell you what I’m gonna do. I’m gonna take and build me a fence around this yard. See? I’m gonna build me a fence around what belongs to me.” (p. 77). In this line, Troy's desire for control and impracticality is demonstrated through provoking death. The r epetitive use of 'I’m' demonstrates Troy’s strong attitude and seemingly belief that he has control over death, when in fact death controls Troy and decides his fate. Troy demands death to stay away from “what belongs to [him]”, as if Cory and Rose were material possessions that he has control over rather than human beings. All the time, Troy desires control to a point where it is impractical. He is living in a fantasy, which separates him from reality causing strained relationships between him and Rose and Cory. Ultimately Troy is inevitably taken by death, and ironically, //in// his yard. --Niuniu <span style="COLOR: rgb(20,0,3)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,6,9)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(14,6,11)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(16,5,5); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(12,3,3)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,2,2)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(163,15,15); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(39,2,2)"> <span style="COLOR: rgb(194,15,15)">"What you smiling at? Your daddy's a big man. Got these great big old hands. But somethimes he's scared. And rigth now your daddy's scared cause we sitting out here and ain't got no home." <span style="COLOR: rgb(16,5,5); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,2,2)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(163,15,15); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(190,14,14)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(14,6,11)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(25,11,11)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(32,19,19)">I liked this passage because for the first time we see a side of Troy we haven't seen before, a truly tender side to this man the reader has most likely disliked from the beginning of the play. --      <span style="COLOR: rgb(20,0,3)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,6,9)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(14,6,11)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(16,5,5); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(12,3,3)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(19,2,2)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(163,15,15); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(39,2,2)">Henry

This quote was quite shocking to me because it showed how insensitive and irresponsible Troy is. This quote is his reply to Rose when she asks him about who’s going to bury Alberta, the girl who Troy had an affair with. This quote shows that he is insensitive and irresponsible because the fact that that Troy won’t go to her funeral shows that he feels it’s not his responsibility to bury after having an affair with her. It also illustrates that to Troy, Alberta is just a person who he finds to escape from reality. -- Neville
 * “She had family, Rose. She wasn’t living in the world by herself.”**

This quote shows both Troy's responsibility and irresponsibility. Instead of running away or denying that he fathered the baby, he accepts the reality. Of course, this quote is ironic and shows Troy as a hypocrite. Although Troy says he cannot "deny his boys," he denies Croy a chance to become a successful athlete. He is not responsible to his family, particularly to his wife, when he goes off to spend time with Alberta and says that he has gone to Taylor's to watch the ball game. --John
 * "She's my daughter, Rose. My own flesh and blood. I can't deny her no more than i can deny them boys."** (79)

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<span style="FONT-SIZE: 120%; COLOR: rgb(193,11,13); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif">**More about Troy:** ==//<span style="COLOR: rgb(193,11,13); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"> Attach a visual aid (photograph, painting, shape, color, etc) that represents a character trait of Troy. Be sure to label your contribution and explain the connection. Also include your name. //==

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[[image:http://www.royalair.org/falcostand%20copy.png width="440" height="433" align="right" link="http://royalair.org/page.htm"]]
Troy has been described as a large man previously in the play, and this is a part of his personality as well. I chose the image of a large-sized dog as a symbol for Troy; a dog that a family would have a hard time properly taking care of. The dog, after spending many dog-years with its masters, would have a great love for its owners. The owners however would have a hard time training the dog because of its size and strength. After a while the dog may finally learn a few things a dog living with humans must learn, but if it finds a particularly fresh looking dead animal during one of its walks, and if the human then proceeds to try to make the dog let go of it, it might just bite back, and all those years of training would have been forgotten by the dog. After that the humans would most likely see that they made the wrong decision and that a dog like that cannot live in an environment like their home, and go through every option they have to somehow get rid of it. But maybe they won't be able to get rid of it, maybe they'll find that the dog can't fend for itself, and that they must somehow find a way to live with it in relative peace. -Henry

Troy is a character whose unwillingness to change his perception with time has led to many of his stubborn and seemingly selfish decisions; he has stopped moving with time like a broken clock. From his experience as a black athlete, Troy later realized that despite all the hard work and commitment, racism will eventually and inevitably stop black athletes from achieveing their dreams. However, as stated by Rose, "the world's changing around [Troy] and [Troy] can't even see it" because accepting a change in time will be accepting his own failure in the past. As a result, Troy tried to protect his son Cory from the hardship and disappointment of a black athlete, but instead, he was simply holding back his son's bright future in a changing society. Troy's unwillingness to change his perception of the whites was also evident as he constantly blame his disappointing life on the white people. He blamed the white people for his failure to play in the Major League, which was a path, he believed, that will lead to the carefree life he desired. He even blamed the white people for not leting him drive when he didn't have a driving license! --Jacky

Troy is a character who refuses to display his emotions and feelings. As a result, these emotions begin to build and eventually result in spurts of anger. I decided to represent this with a time bomb, showing how Troy may be dormant but suddenly grow angry when roused. Furthermore, when people are around a time bomb they are all aware that there may be a spontaneous explosion. This shows how characters in Fences are aware of Troy's erratic behavior, which results in a sense of tension. --Jimmy

[[image:gorilla-kingdom5-2561.jpg width="212" height="212" align="left" link="http://royalair.org/page.htm"]]
Troy, in my opinion reminds me of a full grown male gorilla. He is a character that is stubborn about his way of life and his unwillingness to change with the rest of the world. Like a male gorilla he has a very big build, and because he is the breadwinner of the family, he has to support his family. Like the male gorilla just because he protects the rest of the pack doesn't mean he likes them, as shown when Cory was talking to Troy about football. He doesn't take care of his family because he loves them, but he thinks its his duty as a man. Also much like a gorilla, Troy is quick-tempered and easily enraged. Troy also give a violent aura around him because of the way he talks and because of that you can get a feeling that he is about to hit somebody. Not only that when he cheats on Rose and sires another baby, he thinks its normal just like how a male gorilla can mate with other female gorillas if he wanted to. Troy overall is a self-centered person that has a twisted way of thought and thinks that he is always right in the end. --**Jerome**

Troy is a man who believes in self-created illusions. His inability to face reality and his way of living in a fictitious world creates many conflicts between him and other characters involved in his life. Therefore, those who make choices or act in ways that differ from Troy's philosophy seem to result in a very complicated relationship with him. For example, Troy disagrees with Lyon's decision to become a musician. Similarly, Troy does not approve of Cory playing football. Troy's relationship with Rose is also conflicting due to Troy's unrealism that he lives by (for example, the Death story). Therefore, I believe that Troy's unrealism that results in complicated relationships between other characters can be represented as a maze. A maze is complicated and seems to have a dream-like quality to it. Troy's fantasy world makes him incapable of accepting other people's decisions and values that are different from his, ultimately resulting in complicated and conflicting relationships between the characters. --Vickie

To me, Troy is like an iceberg. The iceberg has a very formidable and impressive appearance which is also similar to Troy's physical build. Also, Troy is unmoving and stubborn just like an iceberg moving along at its own pace and having the water flow around it. Another similarity that i found between the two was that like Troy, the iceberg is at first harmless but as it slowly starts to melt away, it starts to create problems for the earth very similar to Troy's problems that later have very negative consequences on his family such as him cheating on his wife or denying his son the chance to play football. --Roy

Glass shards are accurate representations of Troy. While these pieces may have been intricate sculptures or artistic windows, they are now mostly useless and generally harmful pieces of glass. If glass shards had a mind, they might desire to return to their previous states of glory. Similarly, Troy was once an excellent baseball players, accumulating a staggering number of home runs. However, as time has passed, he is merely a garbage collector. Despite his abject condition, he still dreams and rambles about his days of youth. Furthermore, glass shards pose imminent threats to their surroundings. As a shard slashes across one's palm, it damages nerves, causes blood loss, and can ultimately render the hand as useless and paralyzed as itself. In comparison, Troy lashes out at his sons, eradicating Cory's dreams, in the hopes that his son will assume a lowly job like him. It is therefore apparent that a glass shard's former glory and present hazard are parallel to Troy's longing to return to his youth, and the danger he poses to his family. --Angus

Troy is stubborn like a heavy, unmovable rock that is set to the ground. Other characters including his wife, Rose and sons Cory and Lyon are unable to convince Troy to accept the transformation of the world (e.g. colored people playing in major sports leagues). Troy only listens to himself and follows what he believes in, even though often times, he is wrong. He is also like the hard surface of a rock in both his physical and emotional character. He blocks off any emotional connection between him and his family, especially Cory. He is unbreakable and unable to demonstrate affection and listen to what others have to say, which ultimately destroys his relationship with both Cory and Rose. -- Niuniu

<span style="COLOR: rgb(16,5,5); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(190,14,14); FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="COLOR: rgb(190,14,14)"> To me, Troy is like a polar bear. Polar bears, in fact, have black skin, believe it or not, but they have white fur. This shows that he often acts one way and does not want to show his true inner feelings. This is shown in the play when Troy finally agrees to give Lyons money, by saying that it is up to Rose's decision whether or not to let Lyons have the money. Like most of the other pictures here, polar bears are large and this represents Troy's physical characteristics as well. --John


 * [[image:shadowstandin.jpg width="439" height="332" align="right" caption="Troys Shadow Over Corey" link="http://royalair.org/page.htm"]] ||
 * Troys Shadow Over Corey ||

<span style="FONT-SIZE: 120%; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif"><span style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana,Geneva,sans-serif">I <span style="COLOR: rgb(0,0,0); BACKGROUND-COLOR: rgb(255,255,255)">think that in the relationship between Troy and Corey, Troy is casting a shadow over Corey that is influencing him in everything he does. Troy is Corey's role model and all he wants from his father are kind words and praise but he never gets that because his father is always so critical of him because he wants to give his son a different life from his. <span style="COLOR: rgb(0,0,0); BACKGROUND-COLOR: rgb(255,255,255)"><span style="FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial Black',Gadget,sans-serif; BACKGROUND-COLOR: rgb(0,0,0)"><span style="COLOR: rgb(16,15,15); FONT-FAMILY: Verdana,Geneva,sans-serif; BACKGROUND-COLOR: rgb(243,241,241)">This causes Corey to always try to live up to his fathers expectations of him to just try to satisfy him. When Corey realizes he will never be able to satisfy his father he leaves the house. When Corey comes back for Troys funeral the fact that he does not want to go says a lot. It shows that the conflict that he went through with his father left a great impression on him and that he still has strong feelings after such a long time. <span style="FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial Black',Gadget,sans-serif; BACKGROUND-COLOR: rgb(255,255,255)"><span style="FONT-FAMILY: Verdana,Geneva,sans-serif">Change 0 of 0 -- Andrew<span style="FONT-SIZE: 120%; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia,serif">



To me, Troy is like fire. Fire is one of the elements which are used in daily life; such as providing heat for people and used to cook food which helps support life. In ways Troy is similar, he supports his family by working and earning money for them. Although fire is useful, it is also dangerous and harmful to people. Troy is the same; although he supports his family, he is also the one who breaks the family apart. Just like Troy who can be potentially dangerous if aroused or if someone disagrees with his philosophy --Neville

Unlike the gigantic rock, the big polar bear, or the burning fire, I here use migrant birds to show some of Troy's features. Like migrant birds, Troy is alert of past experiences- the migrant birds go through the same path every year, and they are aware, and rely on their past when they make a flight. Troy relies to his past memories and cannot forget them, anytime, anywhere. He is concious that he's been through many unpleasent things like an unpleasent family- leaving home by 14, not getting a chance to play in the major baseball league... He reacts strongly accordingly to his past memories whenever he sees that something happening that reminds him of the past--( whenever Cory showed his passion towards playing in the football team, he says no, and uses all means to stop him from playing.). Troy, like the birds following the same path every year they make a journey, follows his own rules inside his head and holds on to his beliefs. -Linda

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