Laverne & Shirley

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    Similarities of symbols in “The Masque of the Red Death” and “The Lottery” There is always an inevitability of an outcome at ones point of life. Poe’s story about “The Masque of the Red Death” shows how the partygoers becomes folly and avoid death at all cost. Jackson’s story about “The Lottery” shows how Tessie mentioning the fact that the lottery was unjust lead to her own death. Both authors present vividly in their stories, the inevitability of each characters own death. Poe paints a picture…

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    What is her claim? • Tradition, with its rituals, can continue mindlessly, regardless of reality. o For the village people, the lottery is something to win.  The lottery is tradition and is just accepted.  The lottery brings a full corn harvest (i.e., feeds the village). o The reality: winning is death by stoning to cause an unknown change. What does she use to support her decisions? • The village’s common acceptance of, expectations in, and nostalgia for the lottery and the change it brings…

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    Traditions have an impact on our lives, influencing our relationships with friends and family in either positive or negative ways. As many probably know on events like christmas or birthdays friends and family come together to give each other presents and spend time together as a form of annual tradition. It is mostly a positive tradition strengthening relationships and lay fights beside. The Lottery also starts in a positiv way. The weather is nice and everybody seems to have fun. But unlike…

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    Taking the Same Chance: A Formal Approach to “The Lottery” How would one handle the knowledge that today was the day in which someone amongst the community, including oneself, would undoubtedly die? In Shirley Jackson’s, “The Lottery” tradition calls for an annual sacrifice in order to keep a town’s crops plentiful. While this may seem extreme, the idea of allowing such things to continue based on the notion that it is the way things have always been done is none too absent in most areas of the…

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    Athlete Dying Young Poem

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    “To an Athlete Dying Young” & “Ex-Basketball Player” In Both, “To an Athlete dying Young” and “Ex basketball player”, We experience several poetic devices that compare and contrast eachother in these fairly similar poems. In the poem written by John Updike, “Ex-Basketball Player”, Flick a fictional character is stuck in a loop and his daunting past wrecks his current future. In this poem flicks past shows a young basketball player is praised for setting several records and being a country…

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    In the short story “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson, a peculiar ritual occurs every year. Rather than what mundanely the connotation of the lottery, which is conventionally a positive acquiring victory, this type of lottery will have detrimental consequences. By normalizing the lottery, Jackson edifications most of the citizen’s fear. To plenarily understand “The Lottery,” it avails to analyze the elements of theme, characterization, and symbolism. A reoccurring theme in “The Lottery” is the…

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    Linking Detrimental Traditions to The Lottery Influential, award-winning author Shirley Jackson depicts a dystopian society in her world-renowned short story “The Lottery”. Jackson irrefutably illustrates how society can follow antiquated traditions to their detriment; consequently, empowering readers to form cogent connections to equivalently destructive traditions. Calamitous practices are present in multifarious countries in contemporary society: the tradition of female genital mutilation,…

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    mistakes, but what happens when people make some without even knowing it? In the two short stories “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson and “The Veldt” by Ray Bradbury, the authors write about this exact topic. They express in their stories the consequences of some mistakes from characters that end up to be more than just consequential. Although “The Veldt” by Ray Bradbury and “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson may differ immensely, the stories’ themes similarly convey that blindly accepting something…

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    In “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson and “The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas” by Ursala Le Guin, they are different and similar in ways that one person is being sacrificed for happiness. Sacrifice in “The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas” if for the happiness of the entire town. Adults in this story see a child suffer and just let it pass by like it’s an everyday ordeal. In this story it is thought the child suffering is an everyday thing. “Their happiness… depend wholly on this child’s abominable…

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    family member has their own unique role in society. Men, women, and children have separate but intertwined lives that play out on a daily basis. This concept is commonly expressed in literature. One author who clarifies the role of each counterpart is Shirley Jackson: mother and author of The Lottery. In Jackson’s novel, the social and business roles of men, women, and children are clearly defined. The role of men in this novel is to lead their household. Mr. Summers says, “‘Now, I'll read the…

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