Fences is the play that took notice of human society in the late 1950s, it is the sixth of Wilson's ten-part "Pittsburgh Cycle". Like all "Pittsburgh" comedies, the play began in 1983. The opening scene was about Troy, who is the man with complete control over his life, and his son, Cory and his wife, and the last scene is the day of Troy Maxson's funeral. The fence game is the portrait of the kindness of the other characters accompanying the imperfect human, who was the most controlling and powerful in their life. Their effort is also the result of understanding these duplicates of the work it entails for their audience. The game of fences is the symbol of personal culture and the comprehensive, yet unforgettable central. August Wilson has an African-American mother and his father is a white man, who rarely takes care of him and his family. August Wilson is a good African-American theater writer, which is noted in his famous Ground on which I Stand, Three plays and Selected from Contemporary American Plays, and gets an award for the Pulitzer Prize for drama (1987, 1990) and a Whiting Award (1986). It is his theatrical works that bring out the typical African-American culture in Christopher J. Wheatley's drama (2000). August Wilson prejudices blacks in American society, and began writing when he was twenty years old, being paid twenty dollars by his older sister for his college essay. August Wilson was the first person to have two plays performed on Broadway and specifies the black cultural response to the Internet world Broadway Database (2014). August Wilson's work is not unique to African American theater, but his seminal works about African Americans in the twentieth century are the voice of African American culture. According to the New York Times (2005), August Wilson resisted many offers from the famous Hollywood director, August Wilson said he thought his work offered a different way of recognizing African American culture through people. Fences (1957) is one of Wilson's works, which analyzes the life of Troy, and the white American finds out. Fences comedy begins Friday with Troy Maxson. Troy was a big star in the Negro Leagues and dreams of becoming a Major League player, but the racist feudal society at that time did not accept black players. His son, Cory, works indecisively with Troy, Cory wants to quit his job at the A&P supermarket and pursue football, but Troy immediately rejects Cory and warns Cory to get his job back. Troy won by controlling Cory. Troy and his son are characters at odds with each other. The relationship between Troy and Cory becomes a strong evolution, which is growing between people who want to escape and explore the world and another wants to keep it for themselves. Troy wants to keep his dream of becoming a major league player a secret and keep his son under surveillance, like the fence, which he builds around the house. Troy is the man who, persecuted, has lost the right that is so valuable in the African American man. This led to the thought of keeping him and his family in the safest place in safe thinking. He thought he had established protection for his family. Troy's life is the crime of feudal society without equal rights for African Americans, his death is freedom for a miserable human condition. Cory returns to the Marines to attend Troy's funeral, Rose tells Cory that forgiveness will make a man, Cory sings a blue song for his father,
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