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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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Paper Masters
Compare and Contrast Themes of Young Goodman Brown and the Lottery
Throughout his career, Nathaniel Hawthorne remained concerned about the hypocritical nature of puritan life. Stories like "Young Goodman Brown" darkly satirize religious fundamentalism and mob mentality. Shirley Jackson also uses dark humor to satirize religion and small town American life. Both Shirley Jackson's "The Lottery" and Nathaniel Hawthorne's "Young Goodman Brown" elucidate the theme of mob mentality in America by exposing the sinister side of religion.
Paper Undergraduate
Dawn of Civilization, the Battle
¶ … dawn of civilization, the battle between good and evil has been part of the mythology and interconnected philosophies of human beings. From the Epic of Gilgamesh to the battles between Egyptian Gods, to the words of…
Paper Undergraduate
Cultivate: A Short Story About Self-Discovery and Happiness
¶ … fortuneteller at the pier said I would find happiness only if I cultivated a relationship with a person with red hair.
Essay Doctorate
Status, Consumerism, and Teen Peer Culture: A Sociological Reaction
¶ … Freaks, Geeks and Cool Kids, Milner provides a number of provocative statements that are worth contemplating and reacting to. Write a reaction essay to these two arguments. Illustrate knowledge of the Sociological…
Research Paper Masters
The Western experience in history and culture
This paper takes a first person historical perspective of an event from the 19th century. It focuses on the Trail of Tears and Indian removal to Oklahoma. It begins with the following line: The rumors were true, and I feel like a fool that I had not believed them when I first heard them.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Social class mobility and change
Social class refers to the categorization of one's standing in the society according to level of income. People with higher income enjoy better social status and thus their social class improves.
Paper Undergraduate
Pojman\'s View on Merit According
According to Louis Pojman's 1999 essay Merit: Why Do We Value It?, society should reward individuals for the extent to which they contribute to the betterment of society and the welfare of the human community.
Paper Undergraduate
Key success factors for effective interviews
Tenacity and Ability to Accept and Adapt Positively to Change
Research Paper Undergraduate
Comparison concepts and applications
Both "The Lottery" by Shirley Jackson and "The Story of an Hour" by Kate Chopin depict female protagonists who make bad decisions to live passively in social environments that ultimately end up engineering their…
Research Paper Doctorate
Symbolism in Shirley Jackson\'s the Lottery
¶ … Lottery by Shirley Jackson. Specifically it will discuss symbolism in the story, and how symbolism functions as a whole. Symbolism is one of the main themes of "The Lottery," and author Jackson develops and creates…