How Does The Lottery By Shirley Jackson Change

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Life choices make everyone rethink how things are done. The change of anything always paves the way for the future. Shirley Jackson wrote a wonderful short story called “The Lottery”. The story holds many themes, one being about blind obedience. The story is one for caution, showing the dangers of no growth or change for the sake of what has become a custom. Change is needed when it comes to policy and traditions. “The Lottery,” by Shirley Jackson, starts off by explaining a small town getting ready for the Lottery. It was noted the Lottery can be two hours long with time to spare for the villagers to get home for dinner. The story is set talking about the stones, but the ambiance made it seem like it was a festival, something to be happy about. “The lottery was conducted—as were the …show more content…

The argument could be the villagers were fine with the ‘winner’ as it was not them or their family. The oldest man there was Mr. Warner, who stated it would be his seventy-seventh year. Meaning Mr. Warner had been in the village the longest, helped in the killing of many other villagers, and came to the blind acceptance that it was how it should be done, and people may change to keep to old practice of doing things. People and things change with time, not everything stays the same, it is impossible to not have some inkling of change. Innovations are made to change the work and dynamic of daily life. An example taken from Shirley Jackson's short story The Lottery is the wooden chips changed to paper due to the increase of townsfolk. The black box is often suggested to be changed, but never is. Stated at the beginning of the Lottery by Shirley Jackson “.Mr. Summers began talking again about a new box, but every year the subject was allowed to fade off without anything’s being done.” The main reason it states no change could be done is the fact the towns people prefer to keep everything the way it

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