The Consequences Of Tradition In Shirley Jackson's The Lottery

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The Lottery is a story about a tradition that has been going on for many years, but leads to death at the end. In the town square, villagers gather and watch as Mr. Sumemers brings out the black box, that is part of the tradition known as The Lottery, and mixes the slips in the box. He calls up each family and if they get a blank paper, they are safe and if they get a paper with a black dot on it, they get “the lottery”. In other towns, the lottery used to go on for 2 days straight. In the town square, the children are gathering stones and organizing them, the women are talking to each other, and the men are discussing their jobs and taxes. When someone gets picked as the lottery “winner”, they get stoned. After Bill Hutchison gets picked, …show more content…

When someone is picked for The Lottery, “the victim and his/her family do not have any right to say a single word against society,” according to Junaid’s short story post. Blindly following tradition, the practice of doing something that is wrong, but you still do it, becomes a bad thing when the tradition leads to terrible outcomes. The Lottery shows that the violence that goes around in the story destroys the society and makes family members go against their own families, “There’s Don and Eva.” Mrs. Hutchinson yelled. “Make them take their chance!” This shows us that the trust in the families break apart from blindly following tradition and how it can cost a family member. Blindly following tradition in this story, makes readers understand that there is no real personal freedom and not a single person can choose what they want, which can lead to depression throughout the families, which can lead to mistrust. There is also hypocrisy involved in the story, because when Tessie betrays her family members, she is blindly following tradition and ignoring the fact that they 're her family.This tradition is horrific to the readers of the story and to the characters, but due to them blindly following tradition, they don’t realize the awful things that result in continuing The Lottery. …show more content…

This tradition should’ve never became one in the first place. Blindly following this tradition created many problems between friends, families, and even the kids. They lost trust between one another, their safety was jeopardized, they lost their common sense, and lost a lot of people in the process. These problems eventually affected them and they don’t even realize it. Many of the readers that read the story expected a different outcome than what initially happened at the end. They thought whoever was chosen won an award or a gift but as they read on, they realize that a person gets selected to get stoned and die. This story shows us how the people of The Lottery ignore the fact that they are killing someone and cause damage to themselves mentally, physically, and 1emotionally.While reading the story, I figured that another person, other than Tessie would speak up and explain to the townspeople how absurd this tradition is. The townspeople are so dependent to this tradition that they don’t think for a second what they are doing and how crazy the situation is. I believe that even though Shirely Jackson had written this with only a few corrections added to it, she should of ended the story with some of the townspeople coming to the conclusion that The Lottery should not continue. Shirley Jackson also explains that after her

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