Beneath the Surface

759 Words2 Pages

Shirley Jackson manages to manipulate the reader in the first reading into identifying with the seemingly normal, pleasant town in order to heighten the shock of the lottery’s true intentions, as well as to expose the reader to the sinister traditions that lie beneath the town. Jackson sends the reader into a discovery of foreshadowing, and symbolism, only found into the second reading, that lead up to the tragic consequence of being the chosen winner of the Lottery.
Within the first reading, Jackson conveys an image of a modest, tranquil town on a warm, summer day. Children are filled with enthusiasm and anticipation due to school being over, young boys begin to collect stones onto piles for an unexplained reason, whilst the young girls talk and sneak glances towards the boys. The men began to gather around the square conversing amongst themselves about farming, and taxes, while the women are commencing greetings and gossip as they make their way to their husbands. As families begin to come together for the lottery, Mr. Summers, a coal owner, is seen arriving at the square. Mr. Summers is the conductor of the lottery “as [well as] the square dances, the teen-age club, [and] the Halloween program” (Jackson 671). This deliberately eludes the town to be a festive, small traditional village as well as an indication of a positive outcome for the lottery. As the lottery is opened by Mr. Summers, Mrs. Hutchinson hurriedly makes her way towards the lottery, she humorlessly explains her tardiness to her husband by jokingly saying, “Wouldn’t have me leave m’dishes in the sink, now would you..?” (Jackson 673). This delay of Mrs. Hutchinson leaves a presumption of low important to the lottery almost to the point of being overlooked. This ...

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...dy. Towards the ending of The Lottery, Jackson finally makes it clear to the reader that a catastrophe is occurring when Mrs. Hutchinson screams, "It isn't fair, it isn't right,” (457). It is creative the way Jackson leaves this direct clue until the very end of the story.
Jackson cleverly produces a story that manipulates the reader to relate to the townspeople by using imagery to portray a small tranquil town about to undergo an annual tradition. By withholding information until the last possible second, she builds the story’s suspense and creates a shocking, powerful ending. It is only when the reader reexamines the story, that evident foreshadowing come into play, in which were not discovered from the beginning.

Works Cited

Jackson, Shirley. “The Lottery.” In Fiction 100: An Anthology of Short Stories. Ed. James Pickering. New York: Macmillan, 1992. 671-676.

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