Is Lottery A Good Idea Essay

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    “The Lottery”involves a small, agricultural community, where they have an annual drawing. The winner of the lottery gets death as its prize. They believe that if they sacrifice a person, they they will have good crops. Shirley Jackson includes many symbols and allusions in “The Lottery” in order to convey her message: traditions can lead to mob mentality if they are not stopped. The story “Lottery” is about a lottery. If they are picked, then they are stoned to death as a sacrifice for good crops

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    as full length novels. “The Destructors” and “The Lottery” are short stories full of internal and external conflict as well as senseless violence. Effect of Tradition – Comparison and Contrast Traditions are the ties that bind many groups together. Many times traditions bring happy memories from the past and help

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    take pride in the ritual of the lottery but the box that represents the ritual is not respected. They do not even think of replacing it. There is no good and logical reason for them to keep holding the lottery because the lottery itself has lost the meaning long time ago, and the only thing left is cruelty. In one of the paragraphs, the narrator tells how the townspeople talk about the official of the lottery, “some people believed that the official of the lottery used to stand just so when he said

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    Dante Panucci Professor Brooks English 1510 6 March 2018 The Lottery Response There are some people who will never believe anything from what they find is true and those beliefs are so ingrained in their heads that they cannot imagine a time when those ideas were not considered facts. The short story, The Lottery, by Shirley Jackson is a one about a village that holds what is considered a disturbing and cruel tradition each year amongst the townsfolk that the majority believe is a necessity. This

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    The Lottery’ by Shirley Jackson portrays a small town trapped in a futile tradition due to superstitious beliefs bringing upon more evil than prosperity. The small town of people are caught following a tradition blindly or to frighten to change their ways leading to serious consequence. some however, do question the lottery but are quickly shut up by old man Warner with the belief that the tradition of the lottery brings a good harvest of corn to the community. As the community continues to follow

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    Jackson’s “The Lottery”, there is a lottery for each town, and everybody goes to the lottery. They put slips of paper into the box, and one is marked with a big black spot, and when Mr. Hutchison picks the slip, his family has to draw as well. Whoever in Mr. Hutchinson’s family picks the slip of the paper with the black spot is stoned to death. Tradition is running away from the fear of change. Because of the village’s strange tradition to complete

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    selected person gets stoned each year? Knowing that it could be your family, friends, or even yourself? In “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson, it tells a story about a village where people have a tradition of the lottery once a year, whoever wins the lottery will be stoned to death. Tessie Hutchinson is a woman who forgets and arrives late at the lottery. Her husband, Bill Hutchinson draws the lottery for his family, he gets the paper with a black dot, which means one of his family member will be thrown at

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    Against the Common Good. States should neither allow nor encourage state-run lotteries. There are five major arguments that people use to defend lotteries. One is that most lotteries are run honestly, but if gambling is harmful to society it is irrelevant to argue if they are honest or not. The second is that lotteries create jobs, but there are only a small handful of jobs that would be eliminated if lotteries were put out of business. Another argument that would support keeping lotteries is that, other

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    would be like if people’s ideas had not changed about slavery, and that old tradition was still around. That is similar to the plot in The Lottery. In the story The Lottery, there are many traditions that are present. The main tradition is the lottery itself. Each year the small town gathers in the center for each family to draw a paper placed in an old black, battered box. If the paper drawn has a block dot, that person’s family has won the lottery. The master of the lottery then places the same

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    Tradition Stays Put Easily regarded as one of America’s most beloved short stories, “The Lottery,” by Shirley Jackson, leaves readers with excitement and perhaps a small sense of doubt. Doubt could be an aspect of the reader’s mind due to the gory fact of the cultural tradition in the small farming town of the story. Shirley Jackson’s “The Lottery” displays the theme of unwavering ritualistic tradition and symbolism. This means the village is unable to move past their tradition while symbolism

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