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The Characters In Shirley Jackson's The Lottery

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Characters are the berries on the bush of literature. They are the jewels of any and every novel, enriching it with entertainment and things of that sort. Sometimes, characters are even better than the plot itself, and in the best of cases, they help the plot, as well as the theme along. Shirley Jackson’s “The Lottery”, an enrapturing story about a seemingly normal town, and, you guessed it, a lottery, is one of these cases. While the characters in this text aren’t particularly deep or amusing, they are interesting enough to allow the reader to discover a motive behind each character’s actions. Each character is a calculated and well thought out method of conveying the theme, “nothing is as normal as it seems”.

In a short story with a plot that’s rather deceiving, it’s no surprise that the characters are as well. In terms of how they interact …show more content…

This is, debatably, one of the other themes in the text, but it also shows how misleading certain traditions can be. In the text, it states, “Old Man Warner snorted. ‘Pack of crazy old fools,’ he said. ‘Listening to the young folks, nothing’s good enough for them.’” As well as “‘Used to be a saying about ‘Lottery in June, corn be heavy soon’. First thing you know, we’d all be eating stewed chickweed and acorns. There’s always been a lottery.’” Old Man Warner is the perfect example of those who latch onto traditions and claim they’re amazing, simply because they’re traditions. Because the lottery has been happening same time, same place, for years, for centuries, Warner has been able to convince himself that the lottery is good and honourable. Terribly so, since someone dies at the end of it. “The Lottery” is really just an exaggerated instance of harmful traditions being normalized and praised for sticking around for long, with Warner’s motives of keeping the tradition alive showing how deluded the tradition of the tradition can

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