Research Paper On The Lottery By Shirley Jackson

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Elle Bagley Mrs. McFarland Block 3A 21 May 2024 Follow Tradition With Caution Author Laura Greenwood ventures that “tradition is just peer pressure from dead people” (“Laura Greenwood Quotes” 1). We do as our ancestors have done without question to avoid shame, embarrassment, and maybe because it is all we know. Just as with peer pressure, breaking tradition takes courage and, unfortunately, people are more likely to take the path of least resistance, despite the consequences. Indeed, history has shown how difficult it is for people to break tradition. Many times these habits are harmful and have lost meaning, but are still practiced and protected. Shirley Jackson shows this difficult truth in the short story “The Lottery,” where a town participates in a gruesome tradition that …show more content…

Jackson utilizes the characters of the town to show people’s inability to change. In the beginning of “The Lottery,” as the children of the town collect stones, “the feeling of liberty sat uneasily on most of them; they tended to gather together quietly for a while before they broke into boisterous play, and their talk was still of the classroom” (Jackson 1). Furthermore, according to an article from Gale Databases, “When Old Man Warner hears that some villages are thinking of giving up their lottery, he is outraged at the breaking with tradition” (“The Lottery” 2). The children are so acclimated to school, that when gifted freedom, they still continue their talk of the classroom out of habit. This type of thinking is mirrored in the character of Old Man Warner, because he is offended at the suggestion of change. The evidence presented by these sources suggests that the characters refuse change, even when it could be beneficial to them. The final way “The Lottery” shows humans are subject to mindless tradition is through the loss of meaning in the

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