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Symbolism In The Lottery By Shirley Jackson

Decent Essays

What is tradition? Is it opening Christmas presents or is it spending quality time with family? Shirley Jackson questions the definition and true meaning of tradition in her short story, “The Lottery.” It is the story of Jackson starts by saying “The morning of June 27th was clear and sunny, with the fresh warmth of a full-summer day”(Jackson 1). As the story proceeds, the reader gets a feeling of happiness. The reader will assume the townspeople are gathering together to have a fun day but, the tables turn quick. The day grows dark and gloomy when the truth is revealed. Blindly following a tradition can lead to negative effects. The stone and black blow symbolize death and depravity. The symbolism of the stones reflect the poor tradition that the townspeople allow in the village. “Bobby and Harry Jones and …show more content…

Tessie was running late for The Lottery in a way of thinking it would not be her, and she was not missing out on the content that happened while gone. “‘Clean forgot what day it was,’ she said to Mrs, Delacroix. ‘and then I looked out the window and the kids were gone, and then I remembered it was the twenty-seventh and came a-running.’” The Lottery does not seem to mean much to Tessie. In Jackson’s “The Lottery” Jackson creates Tessie to be late and make her character short. Tessie being friendly to everyone constructs the reader to believe she is nice and minds her own business. The tables turn when Tessie is chose. If someone else would have received the black dot, Tessie seemed like she would not have been such a hypocrite about the situation. Tessie would have stoned another person with a piece of cake. “‘You didn’t give him time enough to take any paper he wanted. I saw you. It wasn’t fair.’”(Jackson 5). Tessie does not want to be killed so she says the choosing was not fair, but Tessi’s family takes the same chance that all of the villagers

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