Critical Analysis Of The Lottery

833 Words2 Pages

In the story entitled “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson, the author describes an annual event that is held by neighboring towns. The event titled the lottery seems harmless at first, but as the story progresses the annual event becomes dark and tragic. Further, the villagers presented by the narrator seem to be upbeat with each individual gathering in the town square willingly and conversing with one another. The children also illustrate some excitement with constructing a pile of stones around the town square that would later be used for the lottery. In addition, the narrator of the story presents the events leading up the lottery in a calm and lighthearted matter, but the conclusion of the lottery differs from the narrators tone as Mrs. Hutchinson …show more content…

Some facets associated with the point of view in this story include dramatic irony illustrated in the villagers conversation and the objective narrator recounting events leading up to the start of the lottery. First, the dramatic irony is encountered when Mrs. Adams discusses how other neighboring towns have stopped conducting the lottery, which Old Man Warner response by stating that they are a “’pack of young fools’” (293). The villagers fail to realize that other towns have moved on from the lottery to benefit by preserving peace and living condition. Without the villagers adapting such as their neighboring towns they might end up destroying their infrastructure and killing of their population, thus, leading them to their overall demise. Further, the objective narrative also is a key factor into understanding the town’s people attitude towards the lottery. For example, the narrator points out that “The people had done it so many times that they only half listened to the directions” (292). It seems as if the villagers are so accostumed to this annual tradition that they fail to ask one another why they continue with the lottery. The villagers grew accostumed to this tradition that will cause them to self-destruct by killing of one of their own each year causing population to go down and negating the ability for the town to nourish with

Open Document