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Joe Turner's Come and Gone | Joe Turner’s Come and Gone
In the following essay, Douglas Anderson explores how Wilson’s play illustrates that "in reclaiming the self
by recovering the past, the individual becomes capable of constructing a future."
A character in August Wilson’s play Joe Turner’s Come and Gone tells a story about how he was "cure[d]" of playing in guitar contests. Called out to play his guitar for an unspecified prize offered by a white man, Wilson’s character does his best to demonstrate his skill against his two black opponents until he realizes that the white man is tone deaf and cannot distinguish the quality of each man’s music. All three players finally substitute volume for skill, and the white judge, unable to declare a winner,...
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- Joe Turner's Come and Gone: Introduction
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