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Lottery
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The lottery as a literary subject draws most of its academic attention from Shirley Jackson's short story of the same name, a staple text in literature and composition courses at nearly every level. The story's blend of ordinary small-town life with ritualized violence makes it a rich site for examining how fiction exposes social conformity, collective complicity, and the dangers of unexamined tradition. Because the narrative operates on multiple symbolic levels, it rewards close reading and invites sustained critical discussion about what a seemingly simple village ritual reveals about human society at large.

The archived papers approach this topic in several consistent ways. Comparative and contrast essays appear frequently, often placing Jackson's story alongside other works — including Borges's "The Lottery in Babylon" — to examine how different authors use similar premises to explore fate, society, and death. Thematic analysis focused on tradition is another dominant angle, with writers tracing how the village's unquestioned customs illuminate broader patterns of social control and moral passivity. Some papers take a more straightforward literary analysis approach, examining Jackson's narrative technique, the role of the reader's expectations, and how the story builds tension toward its violent conclusion.

A strong essay on this topic grounds its thesis in specific textual evidence rather than broad generalizations about human nature. The most persuasive arguments connect the story's details — character names, setting, objects, dialogue — to a clearly defined interpretive claim. A common pitfall is summarizing the plot at length without advancing an analytical argument, so prioritizing interpretation over retelling is essential from the opening paragraph forward.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Research questions and inquiry methods
¶ … won the lottery for 1 million and you had the chance to take a lump sum or payments over 20 years which option would you choose? Why?
Research Paper Doctorate
Conformity and rebellion in social behavior
Conformity and Rebellion in Works by Amy Tan, Martin Luther King Jr., Herman Melville, and Shirley Jackson
Research Paper Doctorate
Thomas More\'s Utopia and Feminism
First published in 1516, Sir Thomas More's Utopia is considered as one of the most influential works of Western humanism. Through the first-person narrative of Raphael Hythloday, More's mysterious traveler, Utopia is…
Essay Doctorate
Kinds: classification and types
Tradition is normally used in connection with culture and to keep a culture healthy and alive, it is important to allow traditions to stay alive as well. However traditions that place restrictions on personal, professional, emotional or spiritual growth tend to have a negative impact on entire humankind and must therefore not be followed. When traditions are not followed, they die a natural death.
Research Paper Doctorate
State and Local Politics in Massachusetts
¶ … taxes and their implementation in various states. It will highlight the different tax philosophies of progressive as well as regressive tax and what are the various examples of each type of tax.
Thesis High School
Play: definition, forms, and cultural significance
"The Lottery" by Shirley Jackson has come to be considered one of the most representative short stories of the American literature, despite the fact that when initially published in the late 1940s in the "New Yorker" failed to receive positive reviews from both the writers' community as well as the readers of the magazine. However, today, its motifs, symbols and the plot are highly appreciated and are a reference point for the American literature of all times.
Essay Doctorate
First Amendment implications of the Family Prevention Tobacco Act
Many tobacco companies have alluded to the alleged imposition on their First Amendment rights that the Family prevention Tobacco Act of 2009 allegedly causes. A review of this particular piece of legislation reveals that it actually does not impose on those First Amendment rights. A number of sources are examined to prove this fact.
Paper Doctorate
Comparison of specific themes in the Bible
While innovation is generally considered to be the key to success, many writers are well-aware that older recipes can be especially effective when considering a successful story. As a result, a great deal of writers…
Research Paper Doctorate
Measuring Awareness Business Information Systems
Theoretical Perspectives Measuring Awareness
Paper Undergraduate
Freud and His Complete Theory of Grief Bereavement
Id, Ego and the Superego or the conscious and the unconscious mind are some of the terms which are well known by almost every individual. These words not only point out to the field of Psychology but also to the man who coined them and proposed a new realm of theories behind each of it; Sigmund Freud. He is famous for being the father of psychoanalysis and the techniques of hypnosis, dream interpretation and free association which he has used to successfully treat his patients. Psychology is devoid without Freud. This is not only because of the theories which he proposed but also because of his followers and those who extended his basic concept with a new touch. Freud in all his theories talks about the past to be affecting the present. In other words, the unconscious mind which is the hidden reservoir of all the repressed memories and traumatic experiences must be brought to the conscious mind to treat the patient so that he can lead life normally (Freud S, 1923).