Archetypes In The Lottery

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Shirley Jackson’s short story was not an ordinary lottery as I thought. Many people would think that “The Lottery” was something dealing with winning money of some sort but, in this town, it was the complete opposite. The small town consisted of only 300 people who engaged in a traditional gathering which was called “The Lottery”. During the lottery papers were placed in a very old black box, the box was as old as the oldest man in town Old Man Warner. (305) Mr. Summers would stir up the paper inside for everyone to choose if you received a paper with a black dot the person will get stoned to death. The village believed that death will help their crops grow and by this being a tradition Tessie Hutchinson, a housewife and mother of four children …show more content…

Consequently, ancient peoples began sacrificial rituals to emulate this resurrection cycle. What began as a vegetation ritual developed into a cathartic cleansing of an entire tribe or village. By transferring one’s sins to persons or animals and then sacrificing them, people believed that their sins would be eliminated, a process which has been termed the “scapegoat” archetype. (44) ‘‘The Lottery’’ gives us an example of how far tradition can push people towards the wrong intentions. Why did the villagers continue practicing this horrific ritual? We will never know. Jackson leaves this question unanswered because we ourselves don 't know exactly why we continue to cling onto silly traditions for tradition’s sake. Why do we make our children believe that a big guy with a beard has secret elf’s who makes their toys and Christmas gifts every year? Or why does a bunny rabbit hide eggs for Easter? Instead of trying to figure out why the villagers blindly accepted the lottery, we should question why we continue to blindly accept ours. Humanity’s blind acceptance is portrayed through the villager’s failure to understand the purpose of the lottery. We …show more content…

How people are followers and not leaders and how the world can be so evil. Just because others have done it for years no one stood up for what is right and stopped the tradition. Everyone thinks it’s right until there the victim. Shirley Jackson gives us an obvious look at blind obedience to tradition but, beyond this, we may gain understanding into our own acceptance of

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