Thy Shall Be Named in Shirley Jackson´s The Lottery

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“The lottery in June, corn be heavy soon” (page 25). In Shirley Jackson’s short story, she alludes the events leading up to Tessie’s stoning to the Bible. In turn, proving that through the symbolism of their names, all the townspeople were in on the sacrificial beliefs of “The Lottery”.
Traditionally, a child with a name that is that of the bible is classic. In efforts to make the child that much closer with God, parents pull names from His Holy Word. So, it is not ironic but rather conventional that Shirley Jackson chooses to use Mr. Adams as the first of the town’s people to choose his fate from the black box. Representing the towns’ people as a whole, he was the first name called, just as Adam was the first man God created. Adams was to stand as an example for the people to follow – being that he was the only person that greeted Mr. Summers – just as Adam from the Bible was to show Eve the way at which God wanted for them to live in the Garden of Eden. It did not come as a surprise to find that the story ends with Adams and Mr. Grave standing before Tessie Hutchinson, in front the people, as she was stoned – representing the life and death that stood before Tessie.
Just as Mr. Adams, Mr. Summers name was a significant to the plot, representing death cast amongst the people. “Summer,” which normally brings thoughts of livelihood and joyous times, just as in the setting of the story, ironically was the name of the person that the citizens chose their destiny’s from. Mr. Summers drew the heavily blackened death mark upon one slip of paper, and stood before the people as they awaited their names to be called. As he called their names off alphabetically, curiosity raised as the anticipation to know who the lucky lottery winner wa...

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...he irony, The Delacroix, whose name means “Cross” in Latin, where anything but holy people. Starting with Davie Delacroix, he was amongst the boys that lined up the stones which were to be used for the stoning of Mrs. Hutchinson. Can Davie be blamed? He learned from his mother. Mrs. Hutchinson Stood as the friend of prior to the drawing, yet, grabs the biggest stone to cast upon Tessie. Delacroix symbolized how even the church will turn on you in favor of tradition. She stood before Tessie as a friend until it came to the stoning of Tessie. That is when she deceives their friendship. Of all the characters in “The Lottery,” Mrs. Delacroix was the only one that spoke to Mrs. Graves, foreshadowing the “church’s” agreement on “death,” and Delacroix’s devilish plan to willing kill Tessie Hutchinson.
Conclusively, Tessie’s death was referenced to stories in the Bible,

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