Seventy-Seventh Year I Been In The Lottery

620 Words2 Pages

In a fictional society, there is a single day dedicated to an activity which ultimately decides whom will be stoned to death by the other participants. In Shirley Jackson’s “The Lottery”, the author writes about this dystopic society adequately. This is seen in the characterisation, the types of conflicts and in the ending of the story. Characters shape and make the story more appealing. When authors are able to implement complex characters into their stories they’ve succeeded in writing an interesting short story. Jackson was able to create and imagine different characters who can shock the readers into thinking about them even after reading “The Lottery”. This is seen in the following passage, “‘Seventy-seventh year I been in the lottery,’ Old Man Warner said as he went through the crowd. ‘ Seventy-seventh time.’”(4) Jackson created a character who has seen seventy-seven murders and who still believes that this tradition should not be broken. She was …show more content…

In the story, Jackson gives satisfactory examples of different types of conflict between oneself, society, other people, and nature. A memorable quote of one of the conflicts is, “Tessie Hutchinson shouted to Mr.Summers. “ You didn’t give him time enough to take any paper he wanted. I saw you. It wasn’t fair!’”(5) The character of Tessie is an interesting one because Jackson uses her to show both person vs. person conflict and person vs. oneself conflict. It’s obvious that Shirley Jackson is an experienced author because otherwise, she wouldn’t have been able to do what she did with the character if Tessie. Mrs. Hutchinson was joking and greeting Mr. Summers moments before, but now she was accusing him of cheating the lottery. Jackson brilliantly represents how easily one can turn on someone else when something doesn’t go their way. Developing the story's conflict goes to waste if the ending of the story isn’t well done as

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