The Lottery, by Shirley Jackson

1461 Words3 Pages

Today’s American Literature tends to put more of a realistic tone to writing than in previous time periods. Writers point out what society as a whole likes to pretend does not exist, and were often frowned upon for doing so. In Shirley Jacksons “The Lottery” she does exactly that by portraying themes like the inhumanity of violence and the tendency people have to follow traditions even when they do not agree with them. In a short biography about Jackson it says “The story was met with an avalanche of feedback, including hate mail and cancelled subscriptions. Many folks interpreted the story as an attack on the values of small towns America” (“The Shirley Jackson Page at American Literature”). This negative reaction is how most people reacted to this new modern writing, when truly it was just an example of their day to day life with a little twist. It is also says “The reader should keep in mind that during the later 1940s, when the work was published, many city councils across America sponsored weekly cash-prize lotteries that would draw people together in rural communities. The lotteries were meant to spark commerce for the local merchants” (“The Shirley Jackson Page at American Literature”). This type of writing did go a little on the dark side; however, it is interesting and tends to get real life emotions out of the reader. Jackson definitely broke a lot of traditions in her writing and to put it best she put down what she felt not what she thought her readers felt. Her writing is modern in the sense that she drifted away from the typical writing traditions, the characters and reader have to for once answer their own question on what is morally right, and admit to themselves that things that were done in the past does not alwa...

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