Humanity In Shirley Jackson's The Lottery

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This story is about a small village who gather together for an annual lottery ritual. Not the typical lottery the name itself portraits. This typical “lottery” is carry by the head of each family extracting a piece of paper from a black box. Within those papers, one of them has a black dot on it indicating the winning piece. The one who draws the winning paper gets stoned to death in the middle of the town by the villagers. The style of this story not only portraits an illustrative language to have better visual but also implies little awareness as of what is really going with the ritual. The objective of this story also depicts symbolic religious meanings to implicate the truth meaning of “The Lottery”. The story paints a picture of humanity as cruel, brutal enduring humanity as hopeless vicious. There is no doubt in the end of the story the act of stoning someone is itself violent. Is not only seen by the victim itself but also the killer gets to mount. Adding brutality that the ceremony requires the participation of the village, compromising kids, adults and even the family …show more content…

In subsequent paragraphs, we see them politely, “good humoredly” (140) greeting each other, making small talk, waiting patiently, and following procedure as instructed and expected. Even Tessie Hutchinson, who, ironically, comes late, is, nevertheless, on time for the ritual itself and in good humor. Mr. Summers only just before she arrived had “left off talking and turned to the assembled villagers, cheerfully”, having Tessie response with a joke, “wouldn’t have me leave m’dishes in the sink, now, would you, Joe?” (Jackson 141). By the end of the story, the irony and horror of this joke become apparent. Tessie’s final act to tidy her house is itself an act of politeness, one which she did readily without protest or questioning, as if knowing she would not return and not wanting to leave her house a

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