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Irony And Symbolism In The Lottery By Shirley Jackson

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When my mother grew up, her half Swedish mother had a tradition of making oyster stew for Christmas. According to my mother, oyster stew consisted of a disgusting, runny, soup-like substance with fishy tasting, mushy oysters squirming around in it. For my grandmother, that tradition brought back a piece of Swedish heritage that she must stick by, even though she didn't know why it had become tradition. For the rest of the family, it was a horrific, morbid occurrence that almost ruined the otherwise blissful holiday of Christmas. Eventually, the rest of the family convinced her to switch up the Christmas Day board of fare, but not without taking away a tradition she loved. Human beings love to stick to their traditions at all costs, and nowhere does one see that more than in the story “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson. “The Lottery” tells the story of a village which has an annual tradition of holding a lottery in which they choose one resident of the village to kill. Shirley Jackson uses irony and symbolism to show how people must not blindly follow tradition without a reason.
Traditions often have meaning when first started, but in this story, Shirley Jackson uses symbolism to show how these traditions may lose their meaning over time. A symbol that shows that idea is the black box; a shabby, worn box that the village uses to hold the paper which they select to decide who will die. They use this box every year, even though it is not the original box used to conduct the

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