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The Lottery Shirley Jackson Analysis

Decent Essays

The Haunted House of Fiction
When “The Lottery” begins, nothing seems unusual about this community, no hint of what is to come, or how heinous an act is about to occur. As they ready themselves for what seems to be a cheerful event, preparing as if to win something valuable, rather than to lose this lottery, eagerness and enthusiasm fill the air. The tradition this community has been following, is overly duteous, more sheep like, illustrating the extent to which people will go to fit in, to be part of a crowd, to feel accepted. The theme of this story is a reflection on some of Shirley Jackson’s life, from her experiences as a wife in a small community in conjunction with her perspective of the events of WW II.
Jackson was born in San Francisco and grew up in an affluent middle-class community. Looking at the way in which Shirley Jackson begins this short story is telling how she describes the unmistakable charm of this village, with its folks gathering in the square, between two of the most village like the buildings anyone could image, a post office and a bank. After marrying Stanley Hyman, she moved into a similar community, North Bennington, Vermont, which for all intents and purposes, was as quaint a town as the village described in “The Lottery,” with all its blossoming flowers and rich green grass. According to www.northbennington.org, the idea for writing “The Lottery” came to Jackson while she finished running errands one bright spring morning, not unlike the

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