The first similarity I am going over is the theme fear. The people if both stories feared being picked to either win the lottery, or be placed in the games. The people in The Lottery knew that if they were drawn that they would be stoned to death. The people in The Hunger Games knew that if they were picked they had a great chance of death. When death is a close option you are most likely going to have fear. That is the first similarity now it’s time to move on to the second similarity. The second similarity is freedom. In The Lottery the townspeople had very little freedom when it came to the day of the lottery. They were forced to participate. If they were drawn winners they had to be stoned to death, no other options. Just like in The Hunger
Harrison Bergeron is a story where the government tries to make everyone equal by handicapping them. You wear a mask if you are pretty, you lug around a heavy back if you are tall and strong, and you have timed beats to distract your brain if you are smart. One person named Harrison tried to rebel, but he got killed. The Lottery is about how every people draw from a black box and if they get a certain ticket they get stoned. Although the two stories have many similarities in conflict they have very different conflict as well. They are generally similar because they both have someone attempting to deny or rebel against society or government and they both get are unsuccessful and killed in the end. They are generally different because one actually does something that most of society wants while one just doesn’t want accept it and society doesn’t care.
Dystopian stories works depict a negative view of "the way the world is supposedly going in order to provide urgent propaganda for a change in direction”. Often these stories have many themes that can relate to the real world. In the dystopian story “The Lottery” written by Shirley Jackson, many themes such as false hopes,hypocrisy, ritual, and mob mentality are expressed throughout the story. In the story everyone in a small village gather in the town square for the lottery, whoever gets chosen gets stoned to death by everyone in the town including friends and loved ones. The use of different themes throughout the story relate to the literary devices and universal storytelling elements setting, verbal irony, symbolism, and social cohesion.
The first of the two stories I chose to compare and contrast is titled “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson and the second story is titled “The Rocking-Horse Winner” by D.H. Lawrence. I will compare each of their themes, characters, and plot developments in which they are both similar and different. One of the strongest comparison would be that both stories deal with the subject of luck in one sense or another. The Lottery being considered a game of chance in which luck plays an important factor in being the chosen winner but Luck in the Lottery has a different twist of fate because the winner of the Lottery is actually the
The Lottery by Shirley Jackson is very similar to The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins. The Hunger Games is a seventy-four-year-old lottery that selects twenty-four kids, as young as thirteen, and sends them into a rink to fight to the death. The Lottery is about a lottery that has been going on for more than seventy years, where the village selects one person to stone to death. The two stories may have different plot lines, but they have similar themes, including tradition, a dystopian society, and protagonists standing up for justice. Both of these stories are very akin and hold a very harsh lesson.
Shirley Jackson the writer of both short stories put many similarities throughout both stories but there are three major similarities. One major similarity is the dialogue. Both stories have dialogue and they are told by a person who gets the bad end of the story. Another reason for why “The Lottery” has dialogue is so it can tell what the community is like. “Charles” has dialogue to try to give hints to “Charles” identity. Another similarity is foreshadowing. In “The Lottery” the foreshadowing was the stack of rocks that the kids piled in the very beginning of the story. In “Charles” the foreshadowing was a quick sentence told by Laurie the little boy, “Hi pop, y’old dust mop.” This was the same attitude as “Charles”. The final similarity is how both stories have plot twists. In “The Lottery” it is not the kind of lottery where you win money this lottery is if you win you get sacrificed to the corn gods. In “Charles” you believe that Charles is the cause of all the trouble, but Laurie is the real trouble
The two stories are both centered on a particular person in the story. “The Lottery” was centered round Tessie Hutchinsen who happened to be the unlucky one to have picked the
that farming is a way of life that is handed down from generation to generation,
Richard Connell's "The Most Dangerous Game" and Shirley Jackson's "The Lottery" both attempt to provide their readers with the cruel truth regarding how it is typically human to express interest in cold-blooded acts. These two short stories discuss about people who see nothing wrong with promoting criminal behavior, but who eventually come to acknowledge the horrible position that the victim is in by experiencing it from a first-person perspective. Sanger Rainsford, and, respectively, Tessie Hutchinson are the central characters in these two stories and they are unable to complexly understand the situation that a victim is in until they actually realize that they are the victims.
Both “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson and “First They Came” by Martin Niemoller have the same theme, standing up for what is right. The Lottery is a story written about villagers following tradition. While in First They Came, a man writes about how he let things pass him by and did nothing to stop it, until it came to him. Both stories deal with people wishing they would have stood up for what was right before it got to them.
Have you ever partaken in a stoning? The Lottery and The Hunger Games both have very strong points of violence throughout the text. Both of these popular stories have a similar purpose, to point out problems in society. Then two stories are written in the same storyline of “This is our tradition and we stick to it”. The Lottery and The Hunger Games are very different and very similar in who announces, the lead character, and the process of drawing.
“The Lottery” Compare and Contrast “The Lottery” short story and The lottery film, being the same story, are alot alike. Even though they are alike, they also have a few differences. Most of the differences between the film and the short story are mostly line changes. The beginning of the film and the short story are the same. It starts out outside on a beautiful day.
It sounds that the theme of those two stories own totally different themes, but actually they still have some same point. Both Lottery and Popular Mechanics believed ignorance can kill people and they had to respect others just like ourselves. Source. At the same time both of them
The Hunger Games, directed by Gary Ross, and Maze Runner, directed by Wes Ball, are films with similar themes such as heroism, dystopian world and sacrifice. Both films involve killing of innocent lives by authorities in charge as a mean to find peace. The Maze Runner is about finding a cure of civilisation whilst the The Hunger Games uses the competitions in order to control the population and prevent an uprising. Katniss in the film is a 16 year old girl who volunteers as a tribute in the competition. Thomas is also a 16 year old Glader who was forced to be inside the maze by the Creators. The themes and filming techniques used by Gary Ross and Wes Ball in both in their will be compared in order to see the similarities. There are two
My two books for this comparison essay are “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson, and The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins. “The Lottery” is about the towns people drawing out slips of paper and seeing who gets the slip of paper with the black pencil dot; whereas The Hunger Games is about Katniss taking her sister's place when she she's called into the Hunger Games and trying to survive in the arena with Peeta in the Hunger Games. This book ends with Katniss and Peeta winning the Hunger Games and the two of them returning to District 12 with mixed feelings for each other, and an unforgettable experience. There are many similarities between these two books.
When specific traditions within a civilization are blindly followed, the consequences may be dire and the society as a whole can be negatively impacted. The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins and “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson both highlight the consequences that come along with condoning the traditions that were introduced into a culture. By using arbitrary rules, inequitable odds, and blindly following traditions in these pieces of literary work create an environment for a hostile social ritual and ceremony. The societies displayed in these pieces of literature share a tradition of cruel and murderous behavior which jeopardizes the livelihood of the people who reside in these areas, specifically the youth. Although both of the traditions