Category: The Lottery

  • Themes of Humanism in Jackson’s “The Lottery” Story

    Shirley Jackson’s short story “The Lottery” is a mystic and enthralling story, shocking the audience with its ending. The story begins with a quite positive yet suspicious note. From the first lines, readers feel the tension and guess that something terrible is about to happen. Later they realize that they are right, and the horrible…

  • Literary Analysis of Jackson’s The Lottery Story

    Table of Contents Summary Idyllic Premise Foreshadowing Theme: The Sacrificial Lamb Theme: The Inner Demons Theme: The Power of Tradition Human Nature Works Cited Summary Shirley Jackson’s The Lottery is one of the most well-known and culturally significant short stories in the history of American literature. It provides an insightful and horrifying look at the…

  • Tradition in “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson

    Table of Contents Introduction The Lottery Conclusion Works Cited Introduction At first glance, it may seem that rituals and traditions are related only to some special events in a person’s life, but it is necessary to look at this topic a little more broadly. It is essential to look at rituals, traditions, norms, and customs…

  • The True Sense of “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson

    The violence in The Lottery by Shirley Jackson is an appeal to both social order and tradition. Based on the narrator, “no one liked to upset even as much tradition as was represented by the black box” (Jackson 141). In what seems ironic, while the villagers seem to be preserving tradition, they barely remember the…

  • Foreshadowing in The Lottery by Shirley Jackson

    Table of Contents Examples of Foreshadowing in The Lottery The Lottery Foreshadowing: What Might Be Foreshadowed? Works Cited Examples of Foreshadowing in The Lottery While not immediately obvious, there are instances of foreshadowing in the story which seems to imply that some form of auspicious practice was about to occur. The most obvious example of…

  • Narrative & Meaning in Jackson’s “The Lottery”

    Shirley Jackson’s “The Lottery” is one of the brightest examples of how a sophisticated theme can be transferred within only a few pages of a short story. However, this is not the greatest feature of the piece. In “The Lottery,” the use of narrative techniques favored by the writer serves as a powerful tool of…

  • “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson: A Story Analysis

    In Marxist criticism, the rich exploit the poor to become more powerful and wealthy. In The Lottery story by Jackson, Mr. Summer is seen to entice the poor to play the lottery to gain more wealth. In a capitalist world, the rich protect their family from exploitation by the capitalist. In the story, we can…

  • Shirley Jackson’s The Lottery Review

    The Lottery, first published in 1948, remains to be one of the most read stories in American literature. The story revolves around a small village in New England where all the members hold a lottery annually and the person picked is murdered. Shirley Jackson’s main aim of writing the tale was to present a strong…

  • Retelling “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson

    Shirley Jackson is the author of the short story “The Lottery,” written in 1948. All citizens of a small village gather in the square between the post office and the bank. It is a warm and sunny morning of June 27th, so it is high time to organize the lottery, which should not last long.…

  • Condemnation & Violence in Jackson’s “The Lottery”

    Table of Contents Introduction Main body Conclusion Work Cited Introduction The concept of capital punishment is a highly controversial and widely discussed subject. The article discusses the topics of atavism, arbitrary condemnation, and sanctioned violence. The author makes an attempt to argue that capital punishment can be abused in someone’s interest because the victim will…