The
idea of winning a lottery is associated with luck, happiness and anticipation
of good things. In Shirley Jackson's story, " The Lottery", this is
not the case. The irony of the story is that the winner of the lottery gets
stoned to death by everyone else in the town. The story is very effective
because it examines certain aspects of human nature.
One
aspect of human nature that is examined, and that adds to the effectiveness of
the story, is man's tendency to resist change. This is shown in more than one
way. The first way is the way some villagers tolerate the lottery even though
they know it is wrong, and it serves no purpose. They talk about how other
towns have already stopped having lotteries, but they allow it to continue year
after year. Old man Warner even says "there's nothing but trouble" in
quitting lotteries. Townsfolk listen to him because he has been in the lottery
seventy-seven years. The townsfolk feel helpless to change things because they have
been going on for so long. The fact that the box is old and needs to be
replaced but no one takes on the job of making a new one because that would be
an alteration of the way things had been done for many years, also shows man's
resistance to change.
Another
aspect of human nature that we see in the story, and that adds to the
effectiveness of the story, is the ability of man to hide his fear by joking
about danger. When Mrs. Hutchinson arrives late, her husband jokes about
"getting along without her," and she jokes back about leaving dishes
in the sink. The whole town laughs. They must joke because someone they know
will die very soon, and they have to cover their fear. This adds to the
effectiveness of the story because we have all seen people act this way.
The
next aspect of human nature that the author looks at, and that adds to the
effectiveness of the story, is denial. As soon as her husband has drawn the
black dot, Mrs. Hutchinson begins to complain that her husband wasn't given
enough time to choose. She was content to allow someone else to die, but when
it was going to be someone in her family she began to complain about procedure.
This is something almost everyone would do. Denial is typical of humans, and
the author uses it to make the story more effective.
The
"crowd mentality" is another facet of human nature that we see in the
story, and that adds to the potency of the story. In a crowd the stoning can be
justified by each person present because they can tell themselves that they
didn't kill Mrs. Hutchinson. They only threw one or two rocks. Everyone else
killed her. This kind of phenomenon accounts for deaths in British soccer
matches every year. People fall and are trampled to death by other human
beings. Since we are familiar with this side of human nature, its appearance
adds to the effectiveness of the story.
The story is made
more effective because the victim in the story is one of the more developed
characters. Mrs. Hutchinson and her husband are two of the people we meet early
in the story. We identify with them because most of the other 300 townsfolk are
faceless to us. The story is too short to develop too many characters, so we
identify with those characters that are more developed. She becomes like a
friend to us, and then she dies. We empathize with her and her husband, and
this adds to the effectiveness of the story.
Shirley
Jackson's story, " The Lottery", is effective because it examines
certain aspects of human nature, and because the victim is one of the more
developed characters and one with whom we can empathize. We feel shock and
disgust at her death, but we are forced to look at ourselves and our society.
We are forced to look for answers.