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Shirley Jackson's 'The Lottery'

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“The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson is an extremely captivating and terrifying story. The author of “Jackson’s The Lottery” describes Shirley Jackson’s short story perfectly, “It is a grim, even nihilistic, parable of the evil inherent in human nature” (Coulthard 226). “The Lottery” creates an immensely eerie story by using the setting of a small town, the nonchalant attitude of the community, and the tone of the author. The size and remoteness of the village really brings the creepiness of the story together. It makes the reader believe that this story could most definitely be nonfiction. The town has a population of only three hundred, and, based on Brito’s film “The Lottery” it is in a desert (Jackson 312). This only adds to the darkness of …show more content…

The story starts out with children playing and parents acting quite casual. It seems that the town does not care about the death of a fellow community member. The town stacks stones in the corner that children fight over to obtain the best ones. The careless attitude towards The Lottery only adds to the eeriness of “The Lottery.” They are more worried about getting back to work than The Lottery. During the film, “The Lottery” Old Man Warner is the oldest in the village at seventy seven, and it is let know The Lottery has been going on well before his time (Brito). The Hutchinson family wins the Lottery, and amongst them Mrs. Hutchinson, the wife, becomes the not so lucky winner of The Lottery. Throughout the subtle chaos the people of the village begins to call her a sore loser, and it creates a sense that The Lottery is just some game. If that is not proof of their disconnection from Mrs. Hutchinson they even gave her toddler son rocks to throw (319). This is just to show that if something is done for a long enough time you eventually become accustomed to it, accustomed to not

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