Symbolism In The Lottery

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In “The Lottery” Jackson uses a black box to symbolise death. Textual evidence in the story points to this when Jackson says that everyone's name in the village is on slips of paper in the box. In addition to this statement, Jackson also includes the tense feeling everybody has while they are in the town square pulling names. Although not stated directly the reader can infer that this is not the typical lottery that we all normally want to win. The reader can infer that that the lottery is a tradition that will live long and keep killing the townspeople. Also the reader can infer that there will be consequences if their name is pulled.
Other reasons the reader is lead to believe this is because the point Jackson uses later in the story where she reveals the lottery is basically a one way ticket to someone's death in the town. The author states that the kids are gathering rocks to stone the chosen one to death,a tradition that’s been around since they first settled on the land. Jackson also includes the details of the chosen ones death to make the reader feel uncomfortable in the story. She wants the reader too feel this way to build anticipation up to the …show more content…

In the story the author states that there is a card with a name and a black dot on it. The black dot represents the person that is going to get stoned to death. The reader can infer the way the person that is going to die because the children playing and collecting stones and putting them in a large pile and guarding them and not letting anyone touch, move, or play with the stones “eventually made a great pile of stones in one corner of the square and guarded it against the raids of the other boys” (Jackson 1). Some of the other ways the reader can guess what is going to happen is how nervous the towns people are when they are pulling the names in the square of the

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