The Use Of Inhumanity In Shirley Jackson's The Lottery

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There are many elements to any story, but The Lottery certainly encompasses a variety of different fields. The way Shirley Jackson writes is almost haunting, and that’s without touching the gruesome ending of her well-known short story. It is in the way her words flow together. The added, seemingly random conversations throughout The Lottery should make the story feel choppy, but those comments lead the way to a deeper understanding of the story. However, what makes The Lottery memorable are the omniscient objective narrator who is also unreliable, the hovering threat of violence in everyday people, and the lingering doubt about the reader’s own traditions.
One of the deepest betrayals a reader can feel is not when the protagonist is stabbed …show more content…

While the narrator of The Lottery remains objective throughout the short story, the author had a goal in mind, which was “to shock the story’s readers with a graphic demonstration of the pointless violence and general inhumanity of their own lives” (Kennedy and Gioia, 2016, 236). Jackson ironically titled her story The Lottery on purpose because those words are associated with relatively good things, such as becoming a sudden millionaire and fifteen minutes of fame, and not a horrible chance that finishes with the townspeople picking someone to stone to death. By doing this, Jackson insured that her readers would be unsuspecting for generations after it was first published. Jackson also uses a lot of imagery, making sure there are things that stick to the mind of her readers long after they’ve finished reading her work. One of the most noticeable images is the black box that the townspeople draw pieces of paper from. The color black in The Lottery is synonymous with death, the color only being given to the box and the slip of paper that marked the condemned (Jackson, 1948, Kennedy and Gioia, 2016, 237 and 242). The box is also rotting away like a corpse, another strong image of the death the box deals out annually. Some readers imagine that the black box is a coffin even though no such description was given, tying the box further to …show more content…

Before she is condemned, friends laughed at her jokes and “separated good-humoredly to let her through”, but as soon as it is discovered that she drew the blackspot, the town turned on her and fell deaf to her cries (Jackson, 1948, Kennedy and Gioia, 2016, 238 and 243). This illustrates Jackson’s message of how there is an undeniable, underlying violence in people that can be amplified by tradition. The townspeople were so wrapped up in the way they had done things for decades, maybe even centuries, that they didn’t stop and think about what it was exactly they were

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