The Lottery Shirley Jackson Setting Analysis

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“The Lottery,” by Shirley Jackson was published in 1948, it tells a story of a farming community that holds a ritualistic lottery among its citizens annually. Every single year the lottery draw takes place, in which the winner of the lottery is stoned to death by every individual in the small town. However, this is a tradition for the townspeople and has been for more than seventy years. By using symbolism, the author uses names, objects, and the setting to suppress the true meaning and purpose of the lottery. The author also uses the black box, Mrs. Hutchinson, and Oldman Warner as symbols to prove that people will recklessly follow pointless beliefs. Jackson also implies that family loyalty has no meaning or value only self-preservation and that human nature is cruel and violent. The black box is the box, in which the names are drawn from annually when the lottery takes place. The black box also represents the ritual of the lottery and the irrational sentimentally of the …show more content…

“Bill went over to Tessie and forced the paper from her hand and held it up there was a stir from the crowd,” (Jackson 93). Mr. Hutchinson is unmoved to the fact that his wife has drawn the slip with the black dot. He shows no remorse and even participates to stone his own wife to death. This shows that family loyalty holds no value in “The Lottery” even Tessie’s kids participated in stoning her. Shirley discusses that humans are selfish and capable of great cruelty as long as their actions won’t have consequences that harm them.
Throughout “The Lottery” The author poses with numerous of symbols and points that later delivers the irony of what the story is about. What begins as a nice peaceful summer day later turns into a cruel stoning aftermath. Each and every detail used in this story is a clue connecting the final eventuality of the

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