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Original Title: The Lottery
ISBN: 1563127873 (ISBN13: 9781563127878)
Edition Language: English
Characters: Tessie Hutchinson, Bill Hutchinson, Mr. Summers, Mr. Graves
Setting: Vermont(United States)
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The Lottery Paperback | Pages: 30 pages
Rating: 4.09 | 54158 Users | 2758 Reviews

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Title:The Lottery
Author:Shirley Jackson
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Tale Blazers
Pages:Pages: 30 pages
Published:1990 by Perfection Learning (first published June 26th 1948)
Categories:Short Stories. Classics. Horror. Fiction. Science Fiction. Dystopia

Explanation In Favor Of Books The Lottery

Science Imitating Art Jackson’s story was published in 1948. At the time, and since, it has been praised as insightful and criticised as obscure. But almost 20 years later, the French philosopher, Rene Girard, produced a theory which has a remarkable congruence with its theme and, I think, provides the best explanation of what Jackson was getting at in The Lottery. Girard argued that our individual desires are never the product of some inner longing but always rather of the imitation of others. We want what other people want. This he called ‘mimetic desire’ and Girard went on to explore the implications of this insight for the next half century. Mimetic desire, according to Girard, has a predictable trajectory that is familiar to advertising executives around the world. One person wants what another has, just because the other has it. This attracts the desire of others in a sort of exponential wave of wanting. But widespread wanting of anything means, first, a shortage of that commodity, and consequently the mutual antagonism of all those who share the same desire. Girard’s contention is that this incipient hostility threatens to create a sort of Hobbesian world, a non-society, in which no cooperative or coordinated action, including effective government, can be established. Human beings, Girard believed, deal with this situation unconsciously and instinctively by the mechanism of ‘scape-goating’, through which a group identifies one of its own members as the cause of its mimetic tension. This individual is both sacred and an object of communal hatred. The elimination of this individual is therefore not just necessary for the welfare of the community, but also forms the basis of religious practice in which the role of the scape-goat is transformed into a noble duty. Girard goes even further in his later work to claim that the ritual establishment of the scape-goat is the most primitive form of representation, and consequently of language, that human beings have demonstrated. In a sense the essential foundation for human power in the world is religious violence which victimizes random members or groups in modern society. Whether or not one agrees with Girard’s anthropology, and there is a substantial body of evidence to recommend it, his literary usefulness is demonstrated by the application of his theory to The Lottery. The theory explains, among other things the liturgical character of the story; its origins in a distant past; its particular relevance to a relatively isolated agricultural community; and its connection to a paternalistic hierarchy whose continued existence depends on the ritual. As far as I am aware, Girard did not read The Lottery; but since he was in America at the time he might have done. In any case, it is certainly remarkable that an author of fiction like Jackson could have written such a tight short story which captures so much of subsequent academic work. Thus demonstrating, if demonstration were needed, the tremendous importance of fiction to cultural life. For an introduction to Girard’s work see: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Rating Out Of Books The Lottery
Ratings: 4.09 From 54158 Users | 2758 Reviews

Criticism Out Of Books The Lottery
A classic of stoic, gothic horror yet with a twist that leaves the reader thinking. Like any great short story, this demonstrates the power of that medium by brutal efficiency. Subtle, but the Lottery also reveals Jackson's talent for characterization.A chilling allegory: there is value in tradition but beware blind faith.

After reading my first novel by Shirley Jackson ("We Have Always Lived In The Castle"), I came across references to a 'famous' short story that started a major hubbub in the newspaper that first published it. Unfortunately, I also came across spoilers for what the story is about, so it's impact was somewhow lessened.Thus, I will not review it here, hoping some other reader might still come with a fresh mind to it.I will only mention it is worth reading, it shows the author's distinctive touch of

This seemingly innocuous short story wafted into my consciousness with a halcyon, pastoral scene: an English village on a summer's day, suffused with the scent of blossoming flowers and fresh-cut grass. I could almost taste the cucumber sandwiches and the jam scones.But there is a sub-level to the seemingly twee storyline. An allegory stealthily unfolds that immediately put me in mind of The Lord of the Flies.Shirley Jackson's fictitious village, like the island in William Golding's book, seems

This short story is my second classic short story this year and was first published in 1948, yet the story it told is timeless. It is also horrific.The story begins in a happy, cheerful day late in June (the 27th) which is traditionally the day for the Lottery. This tradition has been going on annually for many years even the oldest citizen in the town recalls that it had been occurring since before he could remember.Although some people are talking about other nearby towns that no longer have

Well that was a bit of a mindfuck! I asked on Facebook for horror recommendations and Geri rec'd me this one. Geri, I'll be sending you the bill for my new therapy sessions after this! Jkjk.The Lottery starts out innocently, in fact if I hadn't known it was a horror/spooky story I never would have suspected it would go where it did. Considering this is only a few pages it's one of the best written short stories I've ever read. I have got to read more by this author.Are you intrigued? I DARE you

This is my eighth (I think?) Review Month review.****************************************I'm not going into this plot much. I'll just say that it concerns a ritual that a village performs every year to bring in good crops. The ending is shocking.I'll sum it up with this Bad Luck Brian meme:

The Lottery, Shirley JacksonThe Lottery is a short story by Shirley Jackson written mere months before its first publication, in the June 26, 1948 issue of The NewYorker. The story describes a fictional small town which observes an annual ritual known as "the lottery".عنوانها: قرعه کشی بخت آزمایی لاتاری نویسنده: شرلی جکسون تاریخ نخستین خوانش: بیست و پنجم ماه جولای سال 2015 میلادیعنوان: قرعه کشی نویسنده: شرلی جکسون مترجم: احمد گلشیری در 15 صعنوان : بخت آزمایی ترجمه و نقد: فاطمه فولادی و مریم
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