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The Lottery, By Shirley Jackson

Good Essays

Societies have always relied on traditions in order to keep a culture sustained. Sometimes, a tradition can lose its original purpose, thus becoming meaningless. When traditions lose their meaning, they can cease to utilize their original purpose- or becoming outdated. In “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson, she highlights the detrimental causes of what happens when a tradition is continued, and the original history is forgotten. There are many traditions that are no longer followed today because they no longer serve a purpose, but in “The Lottery,” the outdated tradition is still being followed by the community. Due to the brutality of “The Lottery,” Jackson warns of the consequences of simply following something just because “it’s tradition.” It is through the use of characterization, that Jackson is able to show the dangers of unquestioned traditions.
Jackson uses the young children in this society, particularly the young boys, to show how they participate in this act, simply because the adults do. The boys in this story are used to foreshadow the future ritual known as The Lottery. Jackson makes it very obvious to the reader that the boys enjoy this tradition. When the short story begins, the boys have already begun gathering stones, showing their anticipation, and excitement, for this ritual to begin. She also states that “the children have gathered first of course,” (1) once again showing their anticipation for this event. Jackson also makes it a point to connect the

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