Fear And Conformity In The Lottery, By Shirley Jackson

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The Lottery Even through the times, traditions have remained a constant for the human race. They can be as gruesome as the Aztecs practicing human sacrifice to as simple as saying the pledge of allegiance every day. “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson is a chilling story about the reoccurrence of an abhorrent ritual that takes place on a sunny morning. The people of this village demonstrate fear over straying from conformity and thus have the ignorance that sprouts from never trying new things. Through this short story the author portrays this fear and ignorance the human race has through her casual narration, euphemistic dialogue and morbid events. To begin with, Shirley Jackson is easy-going with her narration by carefully revealing details …show more content…

These characters are not cognizant of the idea that what they are enacting every year is basically murder. They show this ignorance through a very pedestrian exchange between Mrs. Hutchinson and Mrs. Delacroix, “Clean forgot what day it was… thought my old man was out back stacking wood,” Mrs. Hutchinson went on, “and then I looked out the window…and came a-running” (141-42). This short conversation has the essence of an ordinary, every-day chit-chat between two women but in reality Hutchinson forgets that the lottery is about to start. Since the villagers do not know any different, they react to the lottery this way because they have no idea what it is to live without this ritual. Sadly, this society’s way of thinking is a fetter to them. Villagers who realize how despicable the practice really is are the ones chosen to be stoned, “It isn’t fair, it isn’t right,”Mrs. Hutchinson screamed and then they were upon her” (146). This a reaction that is purely human and is written into the story to show how surmountable it is to break the meaning of the tradition in one person. Then the villagers who have not been chosen in the lottery have no knowledge of what it feels to see your imminent death in the form of rocks. In addition, Jackson chooses the events in her to prove a point about …show more content…

Delacroix selected a stone so large she had to pick it up with both hands… “Come on,” she said, “Hurry up” (146). Mrs. Delacroix is a surprising character since just a few pages earlier Mrs. Hutchinson had confided in her for being late to the drawing and then when Mrs. Hutchinson is chosen, she wastes no time in picking up a stone. What is being introduced here is how quickly a friendly face can turn into one of betrayal just to remain like the others in the group. Stoning Mrs. Hutchinson is already a horrid affair and then the narrator involves the children in the activity, “The children had stones already, and someone gave little Davy Hutchinson a few pebbles” (146). Obviously, the adults in this situation have no shame in involve children. This ritual decries death and instills in these children that this is an act of largesse for the rest of village and its crops. Children make the whole scene barbaric since they blindly follow what elders tell them without fully comprehending what they are doing. Even from a young age they are being taught to never stray from the annual

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