Literary Themes In The Lottery, By Shirley Jackson

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In The Lottery, Shirley Jackson uses different elements to make the story more interesting. Jackson creates a feeling of joy and suspense throughout the story. She generates a diverse sense of empathy and emotion. In The Lottery, Jackson uses rituals and traditions to displays a variety of critical literary elements, such as the setting, symbols, the narrators point of view, and the tone of this story.
The setting of this story is in a small village during the summer. Not naming the village is a small indication that this could be taken worldwide. Having the story take place in a town like this added to the horrific events. Imagine what goes on in a small town, where everyone knows each other; everyone knows what others are doing at any given moment. Although it seems like Jackson is talking about just the one community or only the people who live there, she is actually assessing many communities and people throughout this story. It almost seems like she is evaluating America as a whole. The Lottery’s physical setting, a mid-summers day, shows a time of …show more content…

This means that the narrator is not involved in the story, they do not know the thoughts or the feelings of any of the characters. Instead of telling the readers about the characters inside emotions, they tell them how the lottery unfolds. This point of view keeps the readers from knowing what will happen in the end, the only signs of what the lottery actually is comes from how nervous the villagers are, instead of one knowing their thoughts. Linda Martin states that “Jackson 's brilliance is to convince the reader that the residents of the community are normal, ordinary people; and that the rule that they accept so unquestioningly is no more extreme than other orders that comprise patriarchal law” (Martin). If the story was told from a different point of view, the readers would not be as inclined to read the story, the suspense would be

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