The Lottery

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The Lottery by Shirley Jackson is a shocking tale of a town with a tradition that would be considered unorthodox in today’s society. Meanwhile, An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge by Ambrose Bierce, like The Lottery is a thrilling story in which the reader is taken through different levels of consciousness in a man's execution. Both The Lottery and An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge are stories that use situational irony to displace a theme or motif.
The lottery begins on June 27 in the village square as the villagers are beginning to pour in for the annual town lottery Children play, collect stones and begin to make a pile in the town square. The men and women soon follow slowly. Mr. Summer, the coordinator of the lottery, enters the village square with a black box followed by Mr. Graves. The reader is informed that the lottery use to be conducted on wood chips but Mr. Summers eventually confidence the village to switch to small pieces of paper. The crowd grows silent as Mr. Summers approaches the black box and begins to mix the paper within it around. Simultaneously the reader is introduced to Tessie Hutchinsons, a village member, as she joins her family in preparation for the lottery. Mr. Summers restates the lottery rules; the head of the family will come draw from the box plus no one open their piece of paper until everyone has picked one; and then declares the lottery open. One by one a person from each family approaches the box and draws one piece of paper. They slowly return to their place in the crowd and wait to reveal their luck. Mr. Summers completes the calling of names, instructs everyone to open his or her paper and to look for a black mark. Very quickly the villagers begin to converse asking “who got it”. It is s...

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...and escaping to freedom. So much detail was put into the section of Peyton escaping only to be brought back to the reality of his death. Another example of irony within the story was when the Union soldier disguised himself as a Confederate soldier and convinced Peyton to try to burn the railroad tracks laid by the advancing Union soldiers. It was a piece of cake for the Union soldier to lurer Peyton into his trap. Meanwhile while this soldier is leading Peyton to his death, the reader in completely unaware of his alterior motives. This gives way to the shocking realization of Peytons situation.
In retrospect, both The Lottery and An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge are ironic stories with powerful themes to match. The Lottery criticizes tradition and blind belief while An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge toys with the readers mind by creating a false sense of reality.

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