Examples Of Human Selfishness In The Lottery By Shirley Jackson

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Human Selfishness

Throughout history, people have developed traditions in order to build customs and social norms acceptable in their own civilization. In the short story “The Lottery,” Shirley Jackson talks about a village that has a tradition of sacrificing people every year. The author, throughout the passage, gives indirect hints as to what the lottery was used for. Mr. Bill, the man responsible for the lottery, ends up picking a women by the name of Tessie Hutchinson from the box and she ends up getting stoned by by the children. The setting for this sort of tradition takes place in the 1930s and 1940s in village around the U.S. Shirley Jackson chooses such a setting for her story because she wants to show how the village is small and centralized , and what Jackson wants to portray …show more content…

In the passage, Jackson gives subtle hints as to where this takes place. In the beginning, Jackson explains how the children, at one point, were being surveyed, speaking of “planting and rain, tractors and taxes”(1) already hinting that it was a time when people started to pay up taxes and when they started using tractors as a method of farming. Another hint that Jackson gives us was the names of the villagers. Names, such as Harry Jones, Mr Summers, Bobby Jones, and Hutchinson, all are english names, and there only one name stood out from all of them: Dickie Delacroix. This name is French, and at that time period, there were many french people around Canada, meaning that they had to have been in the northern states in the US at that time. Other hints Jackson gave us were that they celebrated Halloween and that women wore “dresses and sweaters”(1) meaning it had to have been in one of the Northern states due to how cold it would get. This means that the setting of this passage takes place in the 1930s and 1940s, somewhere around the northern states in the

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