“The Lottery”
By Shirley Jackson
Shirley Jackson (1916-1965)
an influential American author who has influenced such writers as Stephen King
Born Shirley Hardie Jackson in San Francisco to Leslie and Geraldine Jackson, Shirley and her family lived in the community of Burlingame, California, an affluent middle-class suburb
died of heart failure in her sleep at the age of 48.
In 1940, after their graduation Hyman and Jackson, who had a relationship, were married. While living in Vermont, Jackson continued to write.
It was in 1948 that her greatest success was achieved. The publication of the short story, "The Lottery", brought fame, as well as letters from readers all over the country.
“The Lottery”
a short story by Shirley Jackson, first published in the June 28, 1948 issue of The New Yorker.
based the short story on true events that had happened or were still happening in a real American town.
Receiving highly negative reader response
Creating an emotional effect of horror at the idea that perhaps in human civilization
The foreshadow of the story
Gathering stones
Analyzing the story
Setting
A small village in the summer
Narrative
Third Person (Objective)
The narrator of "The Lottery" is extremely detached from the story. Rather than telling us the characters' thoughts or feelings, the narrator simply shows the process of the lottery unfurling.
Tone
Creating an emotional effect of horror
Symbol
The Black Box
The black box is a physical manifestation of the villagers' connection to tradition
The Stones
The sequence of the story
The story took place on 27th June.
Children took stones and piled stones on the corner of the square.
All families gathered on the square.
There was a black wooden box.
Mrs. Hutchison arrived late
Mr. Summer began to announce who was absent
Two rounds in the lottery
Why is lottery held every year?
“Lottery in June, corn be heavy soon”
The use of a lottery to select the victim
The lottery was regarded as a ritual for fertility. During the ritual, a person has to be sacrificed.
Why did Mrs. Hutchinson have to die?
a reluctant scapegoat in a town's annual expiation ritual
Woman as a victim?
Hutchinson’s overlook of the ritual
Deeper meanings behind
Scapegoating and ritual murder in the service of some dark and unspecified force
The real horror lies in the formerly helpful villagers' active revenge on the unwelcome outsiders.
The corruption of the ritual and myth
themes
Showing the time’s degradation of the original myth and ritual
Revealing a mythical resolution to real problems
“selfishness and cruelness”
What the town people remembered and what they conserved is to be selfish and cruel.
ending
a wicked ending
A ending of divine “justice”?