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The Lottery By Shirley Jackson

Decent Essays

Shirley Jackson’s “The Lottery” is a story about a ritualistic ceremony performed by a village every year around June 26. The meaning of conformity is to do something because everyone else is doing it and this story is conformity at it’s best. The townspeople continue this event year after year simply because it has always been done and because they believe they will have bad crops if it is not done. At the beginning of the story, the reader is led to believe it is a normal sunny day. Children playing, men talking about planting, tractors and taxes and women standing around gossiping. Not until the story starts to unfold does the reader discover what the lottery truly is and how one of the village people are about to be sacrificed for what the town believes will be good crops. Jackson makes a profound difference between women and men in her story. Men control the lottery. The men draw for the households. Anytime a woman says something, a man says something back. The women “stand by their husbands”. When Mrs. Martin calls her son he ran laughing but when his father calls him he came quickly. Jackson also tries to make the town look normal and makes the reader believe it is a normal town. “The morning of June 27 was clear and sunny, with the fresh warmth of a full-summer day, the flowers were blossoming profusely, and the grass was richly green.” (Jackson 373) The story stays normal until the last few paragraphs then turns horrific. “Part of the

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