Sexism In The Lottery By Shirley Jackson

780 Words2 Pages

With the lottery being an annual ceremony, people have become so immune to the idea of killing off one of their peers, that it does not phase them anymore. For example, Jackson describes the day as being “clear and sunny... with a fresh warmth... with the flowers blossoming profusely,” which are words that people do not typically associate with death (Jackson 304). The lottery is a tradition that is passed down from generation to generation so it is embedded into the characters minds that the lottery is just another part of their town. The lottery “reveals the fragility of the nuclear family… and effectively divides into competing individuals whose survival needs are at odds with one another” (Whittier 353). It makes family members turn on …show more content…

Throughout the story, male dominance is presented, whether is being Mr. Hutchinson telling his wife to shut up, or the “Watson boy… drawing for [his] mother and [him],” because she was widowed (Jackson 307). People are able to “see how the gender roles are already marked in childhood” when Bobby Martin stuffed rocks in his pockets, and his peers proceeded to follow his lead; while the girls stand beside them talking to each other, just looking at the boys (Whittier 367). Due to the fact that men were always held to a high level of superiority, it became an accustomed way of life. The men were the ones who drew for their family, so the fate of each family member’s fate lies in his hands. The more members of the family there is, the greater the chance of survival indirectly “encourages fertility within marriage, along with the patriarchal domination that accompanies it” (Oehlschlaeger 259). There is a relation to the story’s tradition and previous times’s tradition where women were treated beneath the men, and were only seen as a means for laboring children. Jackson also uses her characters and setting to create an allegory representing a deeper connotation. She uses symbolism when naming the characters, as a way to foreshadow the tragedy at the end of the story. For example, Graves, Summers, Warner, and Delacroix all refer to a more profound meaning. Jackson never officially said where the story takes places, but she made “several possible indicators” including that “the lottery is itself a model of participatory democracy, the kind that New England settlers made famous... and that farming seems to be the normal way of making a living” (Coulthard 243). All of which point indirectly to “New England as the locale of the story,” and draws a connection to the “history of [its] witch trials and persecutions” (Coulthard

Open Document