“the lottery” “the lottery” shirley jackson. pre-reading questions please answer the...

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The Lottery” The Lottery” Shirley Jackson

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Page 1: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

““The Lottery”The Lottery”Shirley Jackson

Page 2: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Pre-Reading Questions

Please answer the following questions in

your composition book:

1. Have you ever imagined winning the lottery? Describe what that would be like.

2. What do you associate with the phrase “small town America”? What do you picture?

Page 3: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Vocabulary Pre-Teaching

After 10 hours on the job, the greeter at Wal-Mart gave

everyone a perfunctory hello while mostly staring at his cell

phone and reading text messages.

Based on the sentence above, what does the word

perfunctory mean?

• a) acting with enthusiasm and energy• b) done routinely with little interest or care• c) acting with sadness and dismay• d) done with anger toward others

Page 4: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

During-Reading: Monitor and Question

Active readers get involved with what they are reading by continuing to “Make Connections” and to “Predict or Infer.” They also “Monitor” their own reading, making sure that they understand what is going on. They “Question”, thinking about what is going to happen, or evaluating what has happened so far. As you read, pause sometimes to make connections to your personal experiences, predict what will happen next, ask questions about what you are reading, monitor what you understand, and form opinions about what you’ve read.

Page 5: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

During-Reading Exercise

Monitoring

• What words are unfamiliar? Make sure you write down and look up any words you don’t understand.

Questioning

• Jot down other questions that you have while you are reading? What doesn’t make sense to you? What do you not understand?

Page 6: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Setting

• The setting of this story draws on our common understandings of “small-town America”. Give three examples of this from the text.

1.

2.

3.

Page 7: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Stereotypes

…are used by authors to convey a lot of information in a short time. What stereotypes do you see in the story? List three.

1.

2.

3.

Page 8: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Characterization

…is the author’s way of describing a character, brining a literary being to life with words. Which character(s) in the story are the most important? How can you tell that by the author’s story?

Page 9: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Foreshadowing

…gives hints about what will happen next or at the end of the story. Explain how this quotation foreshadows the ending of the story:

Lottery in June, corn be heavy soon.

Page 10: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Allusion

…is a reference to something historical or literary in text. See how many allusions you can find in the story. You must find at least three.

1.

2.

3.

Page 11: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Figurative Language

…is language that goes beyond the literal meaning of the text. Examples include similes and metaphors, personification, imagery, irony, alliteration and assonance.

Find at least three examples of figurative language in the story and explain what they mean.

1.

2.

3.

Page 12: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Symbolism

…a symbol is something that has a meaning beyond its literal definition (i.e. a dove symbolizes peace, red=passion, etc.)

• Find at least three symbols in the story and explain them.

1.

2.

3.

Page 13: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Irony

…is an unusual contrast between expectation and reality (i.e. a fire at the fire station). What is ironic about this story?

Page 14: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Theme

• What is a possible theme of this story? What point was the author trying to make?

Page 15: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Title

…using your responses to the assessment question #4, collaborate with your team members to choose the best alternate title to the story. Be prepared to explain why you chose this title and how it relates to the theme of the story.

Page 16: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Assessment

1. State an important theme of the story in a sentence or two.

2. Use your own words to describe what you think the author means by Old Man Warner’s words, “First thing you know, we’d all be eating stewed chickweed and acorns.”

3. What does the story tell us about the concept of change? Support what you say with details from the story.

4. Create a new title for the story. Give two reasons from the story to support your choice.

Page 17: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Shirley JacksonShirley Jackson• Shirley Hardie JacksonShirley Hardie Jackson was born December 14,

19161916 in San Francisco, CA. Jackson received her BA in English from Syracuse UniversitySyracuse University.   She married Stanley Edgar Hyman, a staff writer and literary critic at the New Yorker in the 1940s.  She and Hyman had 4 children. Jackson's writing career flourished with publications in The New Yorker, Mademoiselle, Fantasy and Science Fiction, Charm, The Yale Review, The New Republic, The Saturday Evening Post, and Reader's Digest. She also published several collections of stories.  Jackson died of heart failure on August 8th, 19651965 in Bennington, VT. 

Page 18: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Ancient Ritual SacrificeAncient Ritual Sacrifice

• In ancient Athens, Greece, Athenians believed that human sacrifice promised fertile crops.

• Each year in ancient Athens, as one story goes, during the annual festival called Thargelia, citizens would stone to death a man and a woman selected for this purpose.

• Death is thought to bring prosperity to the community• By transferring one's sins to persons or animals and then

sacrificing them, people believed that their sins would be eliminated, a process that has been termed the ""scapegoatscapegoat"" archetype

• A similar ritual sacrifice occurs with Tessie Hutchinson.• This explains the village member's remark, “Lottery in June,

corn be heavy soon.”

Page 19: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Historical ContextHistorical Context• After World War II America experienced a trend

toward general social conformity.• People tended to imitate those around them rather than

follow their own separate paths. • Encouraging this conformity was the spread of

televisiontelevision, which broadcast the same set of images to Americans scattered through the country.

• Meanwhile, patriotic rhetoric dominated the public mood in politics. Fears about fascist dictatorships and communism, issues that had been highlighted by the war-induced paranoia and suspicion among seemingly peaceful American communities.

• In the story, the townspeople are swept away by the tide of conformity, and the lottery goes ahead as always.

Page 20: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Historical ContextHistorical Context• By 1943 news of the Nazi concentration camps

had finally reached America. • A number of Americans responded with horror and

concern that communities could have stood by and communities could have stood by and silently allowed the Holocaust to occursilently allowed the Holocaust to occur.

• Jackson hints at a similar situation in her story when the townspeople are unable to fully question or prevent the brutal lottery practice.

Page 21: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Historical/Sociological ContextHistorical/Sociological Context• During World War II, Jews and other targeted groups

were torn from their communities and sent to their death while the world stood by in silence.

• In “The Lottery,” Tessie is similarly suddenly ostracized from and killed byostracized from and killed by members of her own community.

• A few of the townspeople disagree with the ritual, but they merely mutter their displeasure under their breath, afraid to speak out more boldly against the practice.

• Not only do humans blindly perpetrate evil, the story tells us, but they are also capable of closing their eyes to and even participating in terrors that occur in their midst.

Page 22: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

““Let he who is Let he who is without sin, without sin, cast the first cast the first

stone"stone"• “The Lottery” certainly alludes to Gospel of St.

John, 8:7, in which Jesus frees an adulterous woman, directing the scribe/Pharisee who is who is without sinwithout sin to cast the first stone. No one throws stones at her.

• Unfortunately, no one in “The Lottery” rebukes the powers so forthrightly as Jesus does in John 8:7. Tessie becomes their scapegoat; she pays for their sins.

Page 23: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Ritual without meaningRitual without meaning• Because there has "always been a lottery“,

the villagers feel compelled to continue this horrifying tradition.

• They focus, however, on its gruesome rather than gruesome rather than its symbolic natureits symbolic nature, for they "still remembered to use stones" even after they have "forgotten the ritual and lost the original black box“.

• The story may be saying that humanity's inclination toward violence overshadows society's need for civilized traditions.

Page 24: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

POV: 3POV: 3rdrd Person Person ObjectiveObjective

• There is very little conflictvery little conflict in the story—only Tessie’s objections present any conflict at all.

• At the end of "The Lottery," the reader discovers with horror what is about to happen, but the story ends with the casting of the first stones. Jackson prefers to leave the gruesome Jackson prefers to leave the gruesome details to the reader's imagination.details to the reader's imagination.

• The conflict occurs within the readerconflict occurs within the reader as the reader notes foreshadowing in the story with growing uneasiness

Page 25: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Male vs. FemaleMale vs. Female

• A conflict between male authority and female resistance is subtly evident throughout “The Lottery.”

• Early in the story, the boys make a great pile of stones in one corner of the square, while the girls stand aside talking among themselves, looking over their shoulders at the boys.

• When Tessie draws the paper with the black mark on it, Tessie does not show it to the crowd; instead her husband Bill forces it from her hand and holds it up.

Page 26: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Women’s rolesWomen’s roles

• Tessie Hutchinson defies the concept of the passive and passive and selfless womanselfless woman.

• Tessie's actions are decidedly unlike decidedly unlike the behavior expectedthe behavior expected of the ideal wife and mother in the era. Tessie is Tessie is hardly self-sacrificing. hardly self-sacrificing.

• She even jeopardizes her married jeopardizes her married daughterdaughter by suggesting that she join the Hutchinson family in the final lottery drawing.

Page 27: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Women vs. WomenWomen vs. Women

• At the beginning of the story, the girls stand together watching the boys gather the stones, but as those girls become women, the involvement in marriage and childbearing that the lottery encourages pits them against one another, blinding them to the fact that all power in their community is male.

• A most grievous betrayal of another womanA most grievous betrayal of another woman occurs when Tessie turns on her married daughter and attempts to jeopardize her safety.

• Jackson emphasizes women's turning against one another, too, through her pointed depiction of depiction of the brutality of Mrs. Delacroix and Mrs. the brutality of Mrs. Delacroix and Mrs. Graves in setting upon Tessie. Graves in setting upon Tessie.

Page 28: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Mob violenceMob violence• The heinous actions exhibited in groups (such

as the stoning of Mrs. Hutchinson) do not do not take place on the individual leveltake place on the individual level, for individually such action would be deemed "murder.""murder."

• On the group level, people classify their heinous act On the group level, people classify their heinous act simply as "ritual."simply as "ritual."

• When Mrs. Hutchinson arrives at the ceremony late, she chats sociably with Mrs. Delacroix. Nevertheless, after Mrs. Hutchinson falls victim to the lottery selection, Mrs. Delacroix chooses a "stone so large" that she must pick it up with both hands.

• Whereas, on the individual level, the two women regard Whereas, on the individual level, the two women regard each other as friends, on the group level, they betray each other as friends, on the group level, they betray that relationship, satiating the mob mentality.that relationship, satiating the mob mentality.

Page 29: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Foreshadowing…Foreshadowing…

• Setting is idyllic; readers expect the lottery to be a positive experience

• Some of the boys create a "great pile of stones in one corner of the square."

• the men of the village arrive they stand away from the stones, joke quietly, and smile instead of laugh.

• since the lottery is to take only two hours, the villagers plan to be home in time for lunch. (how can they eat after this?)

• Mr. Summers, a jovial man who conducts the lottery ceremony, sets the tone of the event with both his name and his mannerisms.

• The lottery takes place every year when the nature cycle peaks in midsummer, a time usually associated with cheerfulness.

Page 30: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

SymbolismSymbolism

• Black:Black: the color for deathdeath, mourningmourning, punishmentpunishment, penitencepenitence in western civilization.

• The black boxblack box used to draw lots and the slip of paper with a black markblack mark pointing out the 'winner' are mentioned too frequently to be coincidental.

• Black box:Black box: coffin? Evil secret hidden away?• Black spotBlack spot on paper: sin? A “black mark” on

one’s record is negative; black mark: unclean?

Page 31: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

SymbolismSymbolism• StonesStones are a universal symbol for punishment, burialpunishment, burial,

and martyrdommartyrdom: they indicate a morbid ceremony. • Chips of wood:Chips of wood: now discarded for slips of paper,

suggest a preliterate/ancient originpreliterate/ancient origin, like the ancient sacrificial rituals for crops.

• The setting:The setting: no specific name/place indicates this is anytown, USAanytown, USA; the contrast of the town with the ritual helps build suspensehelps build suspense

• Square:Square: (village square) (village square) may represent the four may represent the four corners of the earth—earthly opposed to heavenly; corners of the earth—earthly opposed to heavenly; human-created as opposed to natural; boxed in; human-created as opposed to natural; boxed in; concealed. concealed.

Page 32: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Symbolism: Symbolism: NamesNames

• Tessie Hutchinson:Tessie Hutchinson: Most likely an allusion to Anne HutchinsonAnne Hutchinson ( (1591-1643), American religious enthusiast who founded the Puritan colony of Rhode Island. She had new theological views which opposed her to other ministers. After a local trial banished her she was tried before the Boston Church and formally excommunicated. Anne and fifteen of her children were subsequently murdered by the Indians in 1643.

• The parallelism between her story and Tessie's is clear: to her, excommunication meant spiritual death just as to Tessie being cast out from the to Tessie being cast out from the group = death.group = death.

Page 33: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Symbolism: Symbolism: NamesNames

• Tessie Hutchinson:Tessie Hutchinson: • Anti-ritualAnn Hutchinson held that neither

church nor state was needed to connect a believer to his or her God. (In the end, Tessie rejects the lottery ritual, saying “it isn’t right.”)

• Tessie, diminutive for Theresa, derives from the Greek theizein, meaning “to reap”to reap”, or, if the nickname is for Anastasia, it will translate literally “of the resurrection”of the resurrection”. (sacrifice for sins; contrast with Delacroix—“of the cross.”)

Page 34: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Symbolism: Symbolism: NamesNames

•DelacroixDelacroix (“of-the-Cross”)• vulgarized to Della-croy (no longer truly of the cross)

• Some critics suggest that Mrs. Delacroix represents the duality of human natureduality of human nature: she is pleasant and friendly on the outside, but underneath she possesses a degree of savagery.

• CrossCross has many connotations crossroadscrossroads (faced with 2 directions); to cross something offto cross something off; to be angryangry; to cross overcross over or to pass bypass by; pass from one pass from one side of to the otherside of to the other; to opposeoppose, as in crossing one’s path; a burdenburden; combination of 2 elementscombination of 2 elements; To make or put a line acrossput a line across; To betray or deceivebetray or deceive, double-crossdouble-cross……

Page 35: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Symbolism: Symbolism: NamesNames

•Summers:Summers: the season of summer is the season of summer is associated with youth, strength, growth, prime of associated with youth, strength, growth, prime of life, warmth, leisure, prosperity, happiness, life, warmth, leisure, prosperity, happiness, blooming, blossomingblooming, blossoming

• Mr Summers is the head of the Mr Summers is the head of the coal businesscoal business, which could , which could symbolize close contacts with the underworld, evil; lurking symbolize close contacts with the underworld, evil; lurking just beneath the surface.just beneath the surface.

• CoalCoal is earthly (as opposed to heavenly); black; formed in the process of many years (long-term process); formed from compressed, decaying matter; early chemistry used a black spot to symbolize coal.

• MarxistMarxist critics point out how Mr. Summers, who would have been one of the wealthier citizens, leads the lottery— those with money control the people’s activities.those with money control the people’s activities.

Page 36: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Symbolism: Symbolism: NamesNames

•GravesGraves : the obvious grave = place of entombment/death

• Mr. Graves quietly assists Mr. Summers, with “Graves” hinting at a dark undertonedark undertone.

• Grave = seriousGrave = serious; hints that the lottery may not be a frivolous contest (“Mr. Graves said gravely”)

• Critics have said that Jackson creates balance by creates balance by juxtaposing Mr. Summers and Mr. Gravesjuxtaposing Mr. Summers and Mr. Graves to share in the responsibilities of the ritual: Life brings death, and death recycles life.

Page 37: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Symbolism: Symbolism: NamesNames

•AdamsAdams : reference to the first man, reference to the first man, the first sinnerthe first sinner

• While he seems to be one of the few who questions the lottery when he mentions that another village is thinking about giving up the ritual, he stands at the front of the crowd when the stoning of Tessie begins. Like the biblical Like the biblical Adam,Adam, Adams goes along with the sin; he Adams goes along with the sin; he follows others in their evil. follows others in their evil.

Page 38: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Symbolism: Symbolism: NamesNames

•Old Man Warner:Old Man Warner: Resistant to change and representing the old social order, he warns about how important the event is to the survival of the village.

• Old man Warner is 77 years oldOld man Warner is 77 years old the number 7 has many connotations, but one common connotation is that 7 is lucky7 is lucky …he has been lucky to avoid the lottery so many times.

Page 39: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Symbolism: Symbolism: NamesNames

•Martin : associated with Mars, the Roman god of fertility and war. The following are just FYI:

• St. Martin:St. Martin: Patron of drunkards, to save them from falling into danger. (The origin came from St. Martin’s day coinciding with the feast of Bacchus, god of wine.)

• St. Martin’s gooseSt. Martin’s goose.. The 11th of November, St. Martin’s Day, was at one time the great goose feast of France. The legend is that St. Martin was annoyed by a goose, which he ordered to be killed and served up for dinner. He died after eating dinner, and a goose has been ever since “sacrificed” to him on the anniversary.

• St. Martin’s bird is the ravenraven, long associated with death and departed spirits

Page 40: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

Symbolism: Symbolism: NamesNames

• Dunbar:Dunbar: breaking this name down into its 2 syllables, one can come up with:

• 1. dun1. dun – to treat cruelly; or a dull, brownish gray color

• 2. bar2. bar - Something that impedes or prevents action or progress; relatively long, straight, rigid piece of solid material used as a barrier, support, or fastener; A standard, expectation, or degree of requirement;

Page 41: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

ThemesThemes• (almost done…)

• Not all rituals are beneficial, positive or Not all rituals are beneficial, positive or civilizedcivilized

• Acts of violence, hatred, murder are not Acts of violence, hatred, murder are not acceptable just because many people participateacceptable just because many people participate

• Traditions and rituals should be questioned; Traditions and rituals should be questioned; group mentality can be harmfulgroup mentality can be harmful

• People are not all good or all evil but a mixture of People are not all good or all evil but a mixture of both.both.

• Many more ideas/themes can be applied to Many more ideas/themes can be applied to “The Lottery”“The Lottery”

Page 42: “The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Pre-Reading Questions Please answer the following questions in your composition book: 1. Have you ever imagined

““The Lottery”: The Lottery”: More than you expected,

right…? End of presentation.

(Finally)(Finally)