“ The Lottery”, written by Shirley Jackson, shows the corruption in a village whose people treat life with insignificance. Through the use of literary devices, Jackson portrays how practices in traditions can be barbaric;ultimately, resulting in persecution.…
The lottery process begins first thing in the morning under a bright sun, which sets up for a pleasant setting. “So it could begin at ten o'clock in the morning and still be through in time to allow the villagers to get home for noon dinner” (Jackson 10). The setting of “The Lottery” portrays a pastoral feeling of a gentle summer day. Such beautiful setting for such an occasion again proves the eccentric nature of the tradition.…
In Jackson’s short story “The Lottery” it is evident that conforming to society and sticking with tradition can lead to outweighing personal morals./be a burden on the lives of people. Although The Lottery was a tradition that has been occurring for years, nobody sticks up to support their morals to challenge The Lottery. Not only does The Lottery limit the rights of many, but many other expectations in their society do too.…
The horror that I felt when looking back upon this story, was only amplified by rereading it, knowing what the ceremony actually would entail. The unsuspecting reader begins the story thrown into a lovely summer seen in a quaint village. Details about children attending school, men and women chatting, lull the reader into contentment. Once the reveal is made, tiny, once insignificant details cast the story in completely new light, an awful one. This contrast between the relive happiness of the beginning, and the grimness at the end heightens the aspect of horror.…
“Tradition is a guide not a jailer.” (W. Somerset Morgan) This quote shows how people take pride in being part of a tradition and ritual. Similarly, in the short story “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson, a human is sacrificed every year to follow and honor an old custom that was stamped ever since the town was established. This year out of a village of 300 people, Bill Hutchinson's family won the lottery, and in the second round of the raffle, out of all five members of the family, Tessie Hutchinson had the card with the black mark meaning she was going to be sacrificed. Shorty after winning, Tessie was stoned to death as a sacrifice to the gods. The lottery was conducted because the villagers want to follow an old ritual and tradition which…
Jackson through the cautionary tale The Lottery displays the powerlessness of an individual when up against stronger external power. Tessie Hutchinson immediately disassociates her from the rest of the villagers as she ‘forgot what day it was’. Her initial support for the lottery is only paralleled by her subsequent desperation to get out of it as she demanded ‘to start over’ in an anxious tone. Tessie’s repetition ‘It wasn’t fair’ highlights her as a rebellious figure as she was the only one who questioned the lottery, contrasting to her husband who followed the other villagers’ repudiation of the protest by telling her to ‘shut up’ out of fear of being ashamed by the community. However, Tessie’s later reaction to her family being chosen displays…
“Lottery in June, corn be heavy soon,” (pg 52, line 260-261) sounds promising RIGHT? “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson is about a beautiful nice June 27th when people are gathering around and one person is going to hell. The lottery was created was because the village had to sacrificing someone for a good harvest and now it’s just for tradition. Let’s go into detail on why the lottery was created.…
Shirley Jackson’s “The Lottery” is a very surprising story to say the least and gives an overview in the beginning of a small American town of three hundred people that have an annual ritual called “the lottery.” There are significant parts of the story that adumbrate the end of the story and leave the reader in a muddle until the end. First off, in the beginning of the story, the children of the town have just finished school…
Particularly, when the readers start reading Shirley Jackson's “The Lottery” all seems normal and conformed. The villagers start to gather in the town's square where most, if not all the village functions happen like teen dances, celebrating different holidays. The expectations of the reader would not be any different, As the lottery is recognized as “A competition based on chance, in which numbered tickets are sold and prizes are given to the holders of numbers drawn at random; esp. such a competition as a means of raising money for the state or a charity. Also occas. as a mass noun: the action of playing in or running a lottery.” (OED)For example, in this instance, their civic duty is not a vote, or village decision, but it a process of elimination…
Shirley Jackson's, "The Lottery" concerns a small town's annual lottery drawing and the grim circumstances that ensue. In this short but disturbingly profound piece of work, Shirley Jackson communicates to the reader the theme of scapegoatism along with its implications concerning traditions.…
Shirley Jackson's short story, "The Lottery", ironically gives the lottery a bad meaning. The lottery in this story is used for a public stoning, contrary to the first thing that comes to a reader's mind when they think of winning the lottery; a big sum of money. The reader sees both literal and metaphorical meaning of this story because for one it shows for face value what the entire story is about, and hidden behind it is the notion of the scapegoat being picked like a lottery number.…
Shirley Jackson portrays her characters as people who adhere to traditional gender roles and rituals in her short story The Lottery. The head of the household or “the men come up and take a paper out of the box” (3), obtaining the power to draw and decide the fate of their respective families. Young Bobby Martin only listens to his father, as seen when “His father spoke up sharply, and Bobby came quickly and took his place between his father and his oldest brother.” (1). Shirley Jackson portrays the role of women in the Midwest as a less significant role in comparison to men, suggesting a traditional patriarchal system. In the small Midwestern town of The Lottery, traditional ritual is also followed without question. Even though the “villagers had forgotten the ritual” (7), they still went on with tradition and blindly follow it nevertheless. In The Heartland’s Role in US Culture: It’s ‘Main Street’, James R. Shortridge addresses the question “how could a place concurrently be a land of “traditional” farmers and “modern” industrialists?” (41). Shortridge acknowledges that the Midwest is a home for traditional farmers and that “rural imagery continued” (41). The people of the Midwest are rich in tradition and this is mostly due to traditional farming and…
Shirley Jackson’s “The Lottery“, is a story that is filled with a magnitude symbolism in a fairly short story. The author uses it to help her represent human nature in real life as tainted, no matter how pure one thinks of himself or herself, or how pure their environment may seem to be. The story is very effective in raising many questions in the back of a reader’s mind towards the pointless nature of humanity regarding tradition and violence. “The Lottery” clearly expresses Jackson’s feelings concerning mankind’s evil nature hiding behind traditions and rituals. She shows how coldness and lack of compassion in people can exhibit in situations regarding tradition and values. Jackson presents the theme of this short story with a major use of symbolism. Symbolism shows throughout the setting of “The Lottery,” the objects, the peoples actions, and even in the time and the names of the lucky contestants.The setting of the story helps to magnify its impact on the reader because it is set in a small town similar to the one many of us may know of, and that is symbolic of everything that we consider to be right in America. The story begins on a wonderful summer day in a small town. The author describes the day as very joyful but strikes a contrast between the surroundings of the town and the atmosphere of the people gathered in the square. The atmosphere is sober, where the adults “stood together, away from the stones in the corner, and their jokes were quiet and they smiled rather then laughed."(268) This, in just the third paragraph, is a indication through symbolism of the townsfolk’s sober mood that something was amiss. The setting for the lottery also takes place in the same place as the square dances, the teen-age club, and the Halloween program.(268) This unifies our lives with those of the story sense we can relate to those types of events, and is symbolic in showing that even though this dastardly deed happens here that it is still the main place of celebration.…
Discussion of Theme in “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson In “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson, blind acceptance of tradition without question is presented throughout this story as the underlying theme. “The Lottery” is a tale about a town of people who hold a drawing in their town square. The result of this sweepstakes is the death of a resident of the town; the townsfolk stone the unlucky inhabitant to death because they believe that the sacrifice will ensure the town a profitable harvest each fall. Foreshadowing, symbolism and conflict work in conjunction to establish the theme of “The Lottery”.…
The setting of Shirley Jackson's "The Lottery" is a beautiful June day and it is out of keeping with the fact that what takes place on the town green is a ritual murder. The setting is one of the elements that make the story more horrifying. By using an incredible amount of irony, including the setting, the story is much more dramatic and powerful and more than drives the point home: that following blindly a tradition that no one seems to remember why they do it, can have drastic effects.…