imagine rebelling against them although they may be hurtful in some ways. They may not even remember the reason for these customs in the first place. In the short stories "Everyday Use‚" by Alice Walker‚ and "The Lottery‚" by Shirley Jackson‚ the authors both express their attitudes towards tradition. <br> <br>In "Everyday Use" the struggle over tradition begins when Dee comes home. She has changed her name‚ a name that has been passed down through the family branches‚ to Wangero Leewanika Kemanja. Another
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becoming Thane of Cawdor. One of the literary resources that Shakespeare constantly uses is irony. In this case‚ he uses dramatic irony‚ in which the audience is aware of a situation that the other characters are not familiar with. In this specific circumstance‚ he uses the irony to build up the character of Macbeth‚ to let the audience judge him themselves. There are various examples in which the dramatic irony is explicit. The King has high expectations of the deeds that Macbeth is going to fulfill
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Edith Wharton’s Use of Irony in the Age of Innocence Irony‚ in which meaning is inverted to suggest the opposite of what is written‚ is used throughout “The Age of Innocence” to highlight and gently mock the superficiality of the New York elite. The very title of Wharton’s novel establishes a profound sense of irony in its nostalgic yet satirical tone. It is unclear whether Wharton sees New York’s 19th century “innocence” as an endearing feature of a society still free from modernism‚ or as a
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In “Everyday Use”‚ Walker began to discuss principles of tradition and ancestry. When Dee was a child she hated her surroundings and culture. Mama indirectly says that Dee burned down the family’s old home. Dee also used to say that she hated her grandmothers’ handmade quilts. The irony in the story is that Dee arrives back home to take pictures of her family’s house and to retrieve back the old quilts that she supposedly hated. Walker is trying to tell the reader that one should embrace the past
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7/30/13 "The Lottery" by Jackson‚ is a short story which talks about a tradition which comes up once a year in a little village of about 300 natives. In the lottery process‚ one person is selected randomly and heinously stoned to death. Tessie Hutchinson is the victim of this social disturbing practice and she protest against the culture before she is been sentenced by Mr. Summers the lottery coordinator. In the story‚ the readers first get a gloomy picture of a summer day but‚ Jackson uses this setting
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In “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson uses foreshadowing to clue at what happens at the end of the story which is‚ Mrs.Hutchinson gets stoned. For example‚ Shirley Jackson starts to give us little hints throughout the story. For instance‚ when the town people were getting ready for the lottery‚“Bobby Martin had already stuffed his pockets full of stones.”(Jackson) This quotation displays that Bobby Martin was using foreshadowing to hint at what the lottery really was. The part where Bobby Martin stocked
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Irony‚ usually the most important kind for the fiction writer‚ the discrepancy is between appearance and reality‚ or between expectation and fulfillment‚or between what is and what seems appropriate. Irony is the main element used in the three stories “The Lottery” “The Most Dangerous Game” and “The Rocking Horse Winner”. In each of these stories irony symbolizes a dark side‚ that’s reveled throughout the story The Lottery is a great example of irony The morning of June 27th was clear and
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Shirley Jackson’s short story‚ “The Lottery” uses underlying details and specific word choice to highlight her pensive tone. Throughout the story‚ Shirley Jackson uses the word “Lottery‚” repeatedly. The use of the word in one sentence focuses on the use of it‚ “...Used to be a saying about ’Lottery in June‚ corn be heavy soon.’... There’s always been a lottery‚” (Jackson 31). The word here emphasizes that Old man Warner has an understanding of “The Lottery.” Jackson leaves the reader with a connotative
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In “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson used foreshadowing to hint that someone is going to get stoned because she says the kids gathered small smooth round stones into a pile. I knew this because in the story it says the kids had smooth small round stones in their pocket and pulled them out. A quotation from the story that helped me know this is “Bobby Martin had already stuffed his pockets full of stones‚ and the other boys soon followed his example.” (Jackson). This shows that the kids gathered it into
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The Lottery On a clear morning‚ June 27th‚ the townspeople‚ men‚ women‚ and children begin to assemble for the lottery which is to begin at ten in the morning. The opening paragraphs completely mask the underlying darkness of this short story. As the reader progresses throughout the story‚ these deeper elements of the story become evident. "The Lottery" successfully combines elements of horror‚ irony‚ hypocrisy‚ and tradition in a way that fulfills Carver’s criteria of a story that exemplifies
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