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Immorality In The Lottery

Decent Essays

A Game of Chance Many cultures seek to maintain their traditions for future generations to continue, but not all traditions are worth keeping. In Shirley Jackson’s “The Lottery,” the author’s twisted short story creates an eye-opening view on how unjust and corrupt modern racial practices are. During “The Lottery,” Jackson describes an annual tradition the villagers all share together in their small community; however, their intentions are much darker than they appear. Jackson depicts an immoral society that celebrates the practice of sacrificing one of their own townspeople for the sake of superstition in her short story as a stand against her present day racial discriminating actions, which are just as inhumane as the actions of the people in her work. Throughout “The Lottery,” Shirley Jackson uses symbols in her short story to reveal how immoral humanity is and how not all traditions are worth keeping. The first and most obvious symbol in “The Lottery” is the village’s annual event coincidentally called the lottery. In a shocking turn of events, Jackson reveals at the end of her short story that the lottery is not the exciting get rich quick event that occurs in present time; however, the lottery in this fictional world is in fact a death sentence. Because of its wicked intention, the lottery represents how immoral humankind is, or in this case, how immoral the villagers are. Jackson’s version of the lottery is much more cynical and haunting, for every year one lucky

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