Plot Analysis Of The Lottery

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“The Lottery” Plot Analysis Shirley Jackson’s “The Lottery” takes place in an idealistic small town in the summer. The opening lines describe how beautiful the town is and how happy its inhabitants are. However, this portrayal of a flawless town is a direct contrast to the hidden horrors that await the reader within the town square. Jackson wrote “The Lottery” to illustrate the fact that the inhumane practices that occur worldwide desensitizes individuals to where the loss of a human life is consider commonplace. The exposition or introduction of “The Lottery” begins with a vivid description of a modest, picturesque town in the latter part of June. The townspeople are beginning to gather in the town square to partake in the annual lottery. …show more content…

Jackson paints a grim picture of Tessie’s doom in one short sentence. “Although the villagers had forgotten the ritual and lost the original black box, they still remembered to use stones” (628). Finally the reader discovers that the grand prize of the lottery is being stoned to death. The reader also realizes that the lottery was held due to the belief that a human sacrifice would ensure a good crop. Hence, “’Lottery in June, corn be heavy soon’” (266). This story has several illustrations of paganistic rituals. For example, the story takes place on June twenty-seventh during the summer solstice which is celebrated by pagans through various traditions. The Climax of the story begins with the villagers forcing Tessie to the center of town while they rushed toward her with stones. All the while Tessie could be heard screaming that “It isn’t fair, it isn’t right,” (268). The story ends at the climax, leaving the reader in a stupefied state, as he or she reads the last sentence “Mrs. Hutchinson screamed, and then they were upon her” (268). “The Lottery” seems as though it is an innocent short story; however the plot runs much deeper and is more complex than one might think. Shirley Jackson wrote this story about a ordinary event that turned out to be a ritualistic sacrifice of a human life in an attempt to prove that inhumanity, and pointless violence desensitizes people to the point where they do not care about the loss of human

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