preview

The Lottery Response Essay

Better Essays

Asehun 1
Senay Asehun
Ms. McAlister
ENG. 112 - 21
2 February 2016 The Lottery Lotteries weren’t always about millions of dollars. A popular author of short stories, Shirley Jackson brought light to this in her story “The Lottery”. As a reader I learn, the lottery is a ritual where a citizen of the town is chosen at random and abuse. This not only shows how society negatively influences people blindly, but at random as well. Jackson wrote this story to inform people of the way we live, and how society can change very fast without warning. By illustrating how the town turned on Tessie after she drew the wrong slip of paper, she gave a Segway to the way people think and how things are not …show more content…

Jackson immediately switches the tone of the story with the characters conversation and body language towards the end of the story to portray a violent and chaotic town. A first instance is when Mr. Summers and Mr. Graves came to the middle of the square where all the villagers where gathered, and placed down a stool with a peculiar black box. Jackson once again used imagery in this example to paint an uneasy picture in the readers mind by saying, “The villagers kept their distance, leaving a space between themselves and the stool, and when Mr. Summers said, ‘Some of you fellows want to give me a hand?’ there was a hesitation before two men, Mr. Martin and his oldest son, Baxter, came forward to hold the box steady on the stool while Mr. Summers stirred up the papers inside it.” Now, this isn’t a major lead way to the town being evil or violent, but Jackson subtly hints at the uneasiness by using words such as “hesitation” and “distance”. The reader can tell that there is something disturbing with the picture. She tries to take baby steps by dropping hints here and there about what’s in store. Another example of the townspeople’s inhumane acts is when Tessie Hutchinson arrives and Mr. Summers makes a comment that it’s apparent that it has anything to do with the end of the story until you read it. He says, "Thought we were going to …show more content…

While Jackson tries to mask the true meaning of the Lottery, the truth about the ritual soon comes out through the previous setting. The first example is when the boys are gathering the stones to put them in the corner. Finally Bobby, Harry Jones and Dickie Delacroix made a great pile of stones in one corner of the square and guarded it against the attack of the other boys.” At the beginning of the story this seems like boys being boys playing with stones. The boys were gathering the stones so they could possess them to be able to stone whoever the poor victim was. The second example of Jackson’s use of setting to show the truth behind the town and its people is when Mr. Adams comments to Old Man Warner about a town to the north talking about withdrawing from the tradition of the Lottery. Old Man Warner gets upset and says, "Listening to the young folks, nothing's good enough for them. Next thing I know, they'll be wanting to go back to living in caves, nobody work anymore, live that way for a while.” Now, in this moment the reader doesn’t see it, but later in the story I understand why this is wrong. Old Man Warner likes the idea of the Lottery because it’s been around since before he was born, and it’s a tradition. Jackson uses this also as a repressed setting change, but this time it’s more of a time period change, saying how before now, there was no problem with the

Get Access