Setting of a Story Can Reveal Important
This essay examines the settings of "The Lottery" and "The Rocking-Horse Winner" in order to demonstrate how each story's setting contributes to their respective critiques of society. By placing "The Rocking-Horse Winner" in a middle class neighborhood, D.H. Lawrence demonstrates the danger of deference to arbitrary notions of social status. Similarly, by setting "The Lottery" in a kind of Anytown, USA, Shirley Jackson is able to critique blind allegiance to religious and political ideology without limiting the impact of her critique to a single location.
Research Paper
Undergraduate
Shirley Jackson's The Lottery
Shirley Jackson's short story the Lottery bases its effect, at least partially, on its surprise ending. The plot of the short story seems shocking to the reader, even if there is some suspicion about a bizarre,…
Themes and narrative elements in Jackson's The Lottery and Collins' The Hunger Games
This paper compares and contrasts the themes, ideas, and genres of Shirley Jackson's "The Lottery" and the film adaptation of Suzanne Collins' The Hunger Games. The former is a short story satire while the latter is a roving epic with heroes and heroines. Both, however, look at the darker side of human nature--in different ways.