The Lottery Theme Essay

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Themes are a part of every story. Authors want to share their impressions and understandings of life and human experience, so they might be able to help someone identify or open up to new ways of thinking and feeling. It is impossible to tell a story without letting out one 's views and attitudes toward the subject of a story. The theme is what can be taken away from the story and reflected on in one 's real life. Even if it is seemingly insignificant, superficial, or elusive. It is all part of life. "The Lottery" by Shirley Jackson is a story about a small village that holds a lottery drawing in the middle of the town square every year. The "winner" of the lottery is then stoned by the town 's people. There are three themes in "The Lottery." …show more content…

The elaborate ritual of the lottery is designed so that all villagers, even the children, have the same chance of becoming the victim. Each year, a different person is chosen and killed, and no one is safe. The most chilling part of the story is how fast the villagers turn against the victim. The instance Tessie Hutchinson chooses the marked slip of paper, she loses her identity as a popular housewife; her family and friends participate in the stoning with as much enthusiasm as everybody else. Tessie pretty much becomes invisible to them in the fervor of persecution. Jackson writes, "Tessie Hutchinson was in the center of a cleared space by now, and she held her hands out desperately as the villagers moved in on her. 'It isn 't fair, ' she said. A stone hit her on the side of the head" (1243). None of the villagers paid any attention to her protests. All they see is the person who got the marked piece of paper, and they believe they have to kill her. The fact that she has not done anything wrong does not …show more content…

The concept of family is completely changed during the lottery. The villagers randomly persecute individuals, all because they have the marked slip of paper, and the lottery is a tradition that shows how blindly following a tradition can be dangerous, possibly

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