Avery Papaleo
Mrs. Wald
Period 3
2/27/23
LAT Common Theme Between The Giver and “The Lottery”
Does your family follow a tradition? Are you questioning if you want to follow that tradition? Are there certain aspects of your tradition that are harmful? The fictional short story, “The Lottery”, by Shirley Jackson follows a town with an annual lottery but when you win the lottery you are stoned to death. The Giver, a fiction book by Lois Lowry is about a society of people that have no personality and if you break one rule you will be killed. “The Lottery” and The Giver share a common theme that following traditions can be harmful.
“The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson, has a harsh tradition in it and following it leads to something dangerous.
However, Jonas has sad memories and does not want to bear them, so he runs away with Gabe. In the short story, “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson, there is a village and the people do a lottery where if they get picked they get stoned. In The Giver and in “The Lottery” both main characters think the traditions in their communities are unfair, but the community keeps doing the traditions because they do not know the reasons behind it. Through this, the authors of both texts are showing that traditions are not good when one blindly follows them, so one should try and question them.
This book is about a lottery happening every year and someone ends up getting stoned. The lottery and the giver both show that traditions can blind affect people in many different ways. In The Giver, by Lois Lowry. Society is forced to be like everyone.
Stories have always been something that we, as humans, enjoy to hear and read. This is shown throughout history and continues to remain true today. In Shirley Jackson’s short story, “The Lottery,” she takes her readers through a whirlwind of a story, starting it out one way and ending it with something unexpected. She does a great job of writing, by implementing in foreshadowing, imagery, and the theme of tradition. When someone thinks of a lottery, it usually means that someone is going to win something, such as money.
Kalee Von Alvensleben Professor Emily Malsam ENGLISH 50 10/20/17 Not Your Ordinary Lottery In Shirley Jackson’s short story, The Lottery, a lottery takes place in a small village where the town gets together for an annual tradition. It's not your normal, everyday lottery; but a lottery where you don't want to be pronounced the winner. In this lottery, if your name gets called, you are chosen to be stone to death.
Vidya Jagadeesh Mrs. wald/Mrs. Ruggiero Language Arts- period 7 28 february 2023 Things are not always what they seem in our daily lives when we grow up in them. In the short story book ”The Lottery", Shirly Jackson wrote that a town has a lottery that turns out to be very dark. In the dystopian fiction book the giver, Lois Lowry wrote in the book a town people believe to be a nice friendly town is actually not. In both stories, people's behaviors reveal that things are not always what they seem.
Have you ever seen traditions or rituals that have been going on for a long time and realize they are bad for people? In the story, The Giver, by Lois Lowry, it is a fictional story about a boy named Jonas who finds something about his community that nobody else knows. In the short story, “The Lottery”, by Shirley Jackson, it is a dramatic story about a game that the whole community participates in but there is a twist about it that is very terrifying. In the stories, Lowry and Jackson both use the plot of the story to show that not all traditions should continue.
Would you continue to tag along with an unfortunate tradition? In the story , “The Giver” by Lois Lowry, There is an annual ceremony of jobs that are assigned to 12 years old yearly. In the story “The lottery” by Shirley Jackson ,there is a tradition where a not so fortunate winner gets to win the lottery and gets an unfortunate prize each year. Both stories share the message that people have the habit to cling on to traditions. Both stories share the message that people have the habit to cling on to traditions.
"The Lottery" by Shirley Jackson begins innocently enough with a village preparing for an annual event, but as the story progresses, it becomes clear that the seemingly harmless tradition is anything but, forcing readers to confront the dangers of blindly following tradition. Jackson employs rhetorical techniques that highlight the importance of avoiding conformity, as it will lead to dire consequences. Shirley Jackson's story is a powerful example of the use of symbolism, vivid imagery, and irony to illuminate the danger and violence of blindly following traditions, as the seemingly innocent annual lottery in a small town ultimately reveals the brutal consequences of conformity and the human capacity for violence. Throughout the story Jackson
Freedom of choice is a human right. What would life be like without freedom of choice? In both stories, The Giver by Lois Lowry and The Lottery by Shirley Jackson, they follow traditions that have been around longer than their generation. While The giver is somewhat different they still follow the rules that have been around for god knows how long. Both of these stories follow a dystopian theme
Research Paper The famous short story by Shirley Jackson "The Lottery'" was published on June 26th, 1948. The short story has been drawn into discussion for many years for its short, but intricate and complex story. A summary story in its simplest form could be put as a tradition that was followed by a small town called the lottery, but there is so much more contained in between the lines of that statement. The story has a very dark premise regarding the tradition that the town must follow is for the safety of the town itself.
Throughout time, society has had its ups and downs but in the short story “The Lottery” people’s lives are taken to the next level by challenging their luck of survival. Today winning the lottery is rewarding and a positive feeling, but in the short story it’s nothing but a dangerous tradition that will end someone’s life. In “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson creates a story filled with foreshadowing, irony and a ritualized tradition that masks evil which ultimately demonstrates the central idea that people should not blindly follow tradition. For starters, The short story foreshadows many events to come and makes people’s lives more stressful and fearful.
Kanya Patel Mrs. Wald Language Arts 2/24/23 Imagine a world with unjust laws and nobody changes, or protests about it just because of the reason it's been around for ages so it must be right. In the dystopian novel, The Giver by Lois Lowry; and the horror novel "The Lottery" by Shirley Jackson, both texts show a theme of people being reluctant to change even when a tradition is unjust. In The Giver, by Louis Lowery, society is very corrupted. People cannot act indifferently or else they will be ‘released’, which is the sage's terms for death.
“The Lottery”, a short story by Shirley Jackson, is about a lottery that takes place in a small village. The story starts off with the whole town gathering in the town square, where Mr. Summers holds the lottery. Once everyone gathers, every family draws a slip of paper out of an old black box, and the family with the black mark on their paper gets picked. After that, each family member older than 3 years of age re-draws a slip of paper again and this time, the person with the black mark on their paper gets picked as the “lucky winner” of the lottery. In this short story, after the Hutchinson family gets drawn, Tessie Hutchinson is declared “winner” of the lottery, with her reward is being stoned to death.
“The Lottery” is an realism/horror story written by Shirley Jackson. The story is about some villagers of a small New England town who follow the tradition of making a lottery every year. When it comes, they like to celebrate it with the correct rules and the correct objects so they can feel more comfortable. Everyone need to take a slip of paper from a small black box, and the paper with a black dot in it means that the family is the winner, then they raffle again; Bill Hutchinson, who was the husband of the protagonist Tessie Hutchinson picked a paper with a black dot in it, that meant that Tessie was the winner of the lottery, then she starts complaining because the drawing was not conducted properly. At the end, the townspeople moved off to a cleared spot outside the town and they begin stoning her to death (Jackson).
The Lottery The short story, The Lottery by Shirley Jackson proposes an annual lottery drawing in a little village set in New England. However, unlike any usual lottery, the winner is stoned to death by their fellow townsmen, women and children included. The lottery seems to have been a custom around the area for over seventy years.