The short story, The Lottery by Shirley Jackson, is about a village is the past that had some traditions. One of the traditions was that every year one person would be chosen for sacrifice. They thought the sacrifice would bring a good growing season for the crops. This lottery only took 2 hours, but some took as long as two days. The theme is luck goes a long way because mathematically there’s a small chance of winning, luck is random, and luck isn’t always good.…
This is a story about a small rural village that holds its annual lottery. Families in the village participate and the lottery starts by one representative from each family pulling a piece of paper from the black box the one who gets the paper with the black spot is stoned to death as per tradition of the lottery. This world that is created by Shirley Jackson in “The Lottery” is a dystopia.…
Through her ability to display the grim reality of a small idealized town, Shirley Jackson unmasks the evil of tradition in “The Lottery.” She repeats that mindless rituals are unacceptable practices. Jackson begins her writing with, “The morning of June 27th was clear and sunny, with the fresh warmth of a full-summer day; the flowers were blossoming profusely and the grass was richly green” (715). This first sentence gives us clues that there is not an extreme amount of emotion; it hints that the style reflects the attitudes of the villagers. The townspeople picture the lottery as normal and have no more emotion towards it than they do the flowers or the warm sunny day. The children begin collecting rocks as they are playing, and the adults…
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…
According to the story, the town’s people have no complete understanding of the origin of lottery. They were not aware how the lottery was run compared to recent lotteries. This proves that the villager’s blind faith in the lottery portrays the dangers of fervor; not challenging to change or remove unethical traditions. During the story, some of the town’s people talk about how other towns are abolishing the lottery process. However, still no one challenges the lottery process because it may result in an individual being exiled from the town. It is stated clearly in the text that, “every year, after the lottery Mr. Summers began talking about a new box, but every year the subject was allowed to fade without anything being done”. A black box older than Old…
In “The Lottery,” villagers collects a bunch of stones to continue the tradition of the murder once a year. The public follows by collecting stones, and that tradition will never end. For example,…
Is a tradition really a tradition if it’s meaningless and hollow? The original purpose of the lottery was to make corn growth heavy, but over time it was forgotten, and just done for the sake of doing it. At first, The lottery was actually for religious purposes, and many events followed and preceded it. Then it turned into a hollow tradition nobody really cared about. “The Lottery”, by Shirley Jackson, turns to a less observed topic, and gives us a very good example of what many of us do today.…
The only reason the townsfolk would still be doing ‘The Lottery’ is because it’s a tradition. The villagers and their ancestors have been stoning their neighbors ever since the village was established. Sure the people of the village could disband the tradition that is ‘The Lottery’, but then they would also be losing a tradition.…
The author of the short story, The Lottery, is Shirley Jackson. In the lottery, the villagers of a small town gather together on the 27th of June for the annual tradition of the town lottery, which is conducted by Mr. Summers. In which, every year they select a random person to be stoned to their death, as they are the winner of the lottery. Emphasizing the theme of the dangers of blindly following traditions. This is shown through characterization, tone and dialogue.…
The lottery is not a lottery for wealth, but death. It’s a sacrifice for harvest; instead of using livestock, it uses human’s life. Though some villagers want to change that with the precedents in villages nearby, the ritual in the village would definitely continue, and it’s impossible to be canceled, because of Warner, who holds the mind of keeping the ritual, as a conservationist. The only way to change that is everyone play a role in eliminating the intervention of any opponent, and endeavor their best ability to alter the regulations in the…
In the small town The Lottery is set in, they have been doing the lottery since the beginning of the creation of their society. Traditions and customs past down from generation to generation have to be civilized or at least thought to be civilized or else they would be thrown out. For example, on page two of the story while talking about Mr. Summers wanting to remake the box used for the lottery it says, “…the present box had been made with some pieces of the box that had preceded it, the one that had been constructed when the first people settled down to make a village here” so obviously if it’s something that’s always been around it would seem to be civilized to them even if not to someone on the outside, simply because they don’t know any better. After all, ignorance is bliss. We also see this theme in The Hunger Games however in a completely opposite way, the activities that go on in this story haven’t been around for long it says so on page nineteen when the mayor talks about why they have the Hunger Games; “Then came the Dark Days, the uprising of the districts against the Capitol. Twelve were defeated, the thirteenth obliterated. The Treaty of Treason gave us the new laws to guarantee peace and, as our yearly reminder that the Dark Days must never be repeated, it gave us the Hunger Games.”…
"The Lottery" reminds us to look to tradition with scrutiny because not questioning our own actions can lead to things that go against our morals. "The Lottery" demonstrates this by showing the villagers calmly congregate to commit murder in order to prevent a bad year for the crops. We as readers see this as a crazy and horrifying , (also inefficient,) way to secure that the crops grow, whereas the villagers see this as a necessary ritual only because it is traditionally done. There is even evidence in the story that they don't need to act this way in that some of the neighboring villages no longer practice this ritual and the success of their harvest is somewhat equal to those who still practice. The villagers ignore that because they believe…
It is often said that there is strength in numbers. While it is true that a large group of people has more power than an individual, a single person within a large group will almost always conform in some way. This weakens the individual and leads to fewer new ideas in order to maintain group status and agreement. Many times, rituals or ideas are allowed and accepted just because they are favored by a majority or have been part of that society for so long that they have become almost like a tradition. In "The Lottery", Shirley Jackson uses alarming images to guide the reader to understand the futility and foolishness of blind obedience to these rituals. The lottery “selection” emphasizes the importance of questioning what is right in front of you instead of just conforming mindlessly.…
The Lottery is a short story written by Shirley Jackson in 1948, yet still, leaves a mark on any person who gets their hands on it today. The story starts out by setting an enjoyable atmosphere at the beginning of summer. The community gathers and the story almost fulfills the reader’s idea of a perfect town activity. However, the story has a sharp twist at the end that leaves the reader in shock. Jackson wrote the story to leave an impact and whom how quickly human nature can change. Shirley Jackson shows the duality of human nature in the characters of the children, Tessie Hutchinson, and Mr. Summers.…
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.…