Twists and Turns in The Lottery by Shirley Jackson

923 Words2 Pages

The Lottery by Shirley Jackson is a story that represents a village that lacks the courage to rid themselves of a tradition that harms people within their community annually. A black box is used to draw paper that will inform which family will be stoned that year. The black box symbolizes a deadly black hole that the villagers are occupying because they are scared of change and follow a tradition that other towns already discarded. Overall, The Lottery is a reflection of a quote by Thoreau, which expresses the views that many people act robotic. Communities tend to act mechanical by being powerless against government, and not having their own views or thoughts that can help them change and develop as individuals.
A lack of power is emphasized throughout The Lottery, which expresses Thoreau’s views about how people have “no free exercise”. People do not think for themselves, they just follow what the government or the higher class tells them. Shirley Jackson explains in her story that the people of the village lack power and courage. As thoughts by a new generation arose of ending a tradition that has been around for a long time, those people were looked at as a “Pack of crazy fools.” Old Man Warner being the eldest person in the village, disregarded the ideas of change in the village, showing that he has the power to control whether the tradition is alive or gets replaced. He seems to have control over the lives of the people in the village because they let a tradition, that they have “forgotten the rituals” of, control who gets stoned rather than powerfully rebelling against the norms of the community.
Many people focus on maintaining and upholding moments and traditions rather than allowing their experiences to help them g...

... middle of paper ...

...ernment for it is but as you continue to read closely, he reveals his opinions on the government and the lives of all men in the nation.
Although one may think that the tradition is horrible, the town does not. They see it as something that brings them together on one day of the year. The people live in fear of this tradition because they don’t want to be chosen. It seems as though the people can’t think for themselves and they are scared of changed. The people do not know who started the tradition nor why it was started in the first place. They never talk about previous winners and towards the end, we still don’t know what happens to the Hutchinson family. The lack of freedom in this story is what Thoreau is fighting for in Civil Disobedience. It’s hard to win that fight when society only knows one way and it’s constantly controlled by the people in power.

Open Document