¶ … Wilson's play Fences, one of the primary conflicts is between father and son, a conflict of a sort that recalls many such encounters between fathers and sons. Troy is the father and Cory the son. They are much alike, which is likely where the conflict develops in their case. As is often true between father and son though, the primary conflict derives from their different experiences, with Troy having a long history to remember, a history of hardship and hard lesson, s while Cory has had a softer life and is not learning the lessons that Troy learned, at least not soon enough to satisfy his father.
Troy's experience is clear in the play because he and Bono talk endlessly about it, recalling the days of their youth. Troy has particular memories of his own relationship with his father, a man who taught him much and who was also harsh toward him when he was young. In many ways, Troy is inadvertently playing out that same pattern with his own son now, for he is also violent toward Cory at times and deep-down believes he is teaching the boy important lessons by being harsh with him. He wants the boy to learn the lessons he learned and so be ready for the disappointments that life brings, with the central one held out in the play being his own inability to play professional baseball because when he was in his prime, baseball did not allow black players and would not until after Jackie Robinson broke down that barrier. Now, Cory also wants to play in sports, and his father wants him to get a job and stay out of sports.
Of course, times have changed, which is what Cory keeps trying to say to his...
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