Shirley Jackson's The Lottery

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“The Lottery” is not about the role of women in a postwar society, but Shirley Jackson’s anxiety and paranoia of a hivemind mindset. “The Lottery” is about a mandatory and outdated tradition that a small village celebrates, a tradition known as the lottery. The villagers pull out one piece of paper from a black box every June 2nd. If the paper is blank the villager is safe, but if a villager pulls out a paper with a black spot, they will be stoned to death. At the end, a female character named Tessie Hutchinson reveals that her paper has a small black dot because the rest of the villagers have blank sheets of paper. She is stoned to death. The feminist lens will see this as a woman losing to a rigged system as men force her to die, however, …show more content…

The tradition of propaganda such as anti-semitism remains unbreakable and harmful to both an individual and a collective Anti-semitism, according to an article by Gale titled “History of Anti-Semitism in America: Collections” it says, “Henry Ford, known for his anti-Semitism, published a newspaper in the 1920s in Dearborn, Michigan called The Dearborn that was riddled with anti-Semitic tropes and propaganda. He believed Jewish people sought to control the world through commerce and exchange, beliefs which were praised in Hitler’s treatise” (Anti-Semitism in America). Jackson was exposed to anti-semitism propaganda most of her life by famous figures such as Ford and similarly to the Jewish saw herself as an outsider. She saw the stereotypes associated with the Jewish people such as the selfish and money-obsessed Jews, she saw the harm placed in …show more content…

Another line in the lottery is, “There was a story that the present box had been made with some pieces of the box that had preceded it, the one that had been constructed when the first people settled down to make a village here.”(Jackson 2). The villagers do not like abolishing the past, because they feel they are disrespecting their ancestors and perverting an ancient tradition. Christian Americans who disliked the Jews aligned with Nazi ideology as they felt Jews were impure and corrupting the nation with their religion. Nazi sentiment was that there was a superior race, and Christian American sentiment was that there was a superior religion. Although Jackson listed her religion as Christian Science, she resonated with the Jewish. She did not adhere to tradition and was not a feminist. According to an article titled, “A Faithful Anatomy of Our Times’: Reassessing Shirley Jackson.” by Angela Hague, “Feminist critics for the most part ignored Jackson's work until her death because her victimized female characters were at odds with looking for role models for

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