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by Cynthia Ozick are two short stories that when read in comparison can be seen as lacking similarity. It is often the case that when literature is read in contrast to another work there are a vast number of obvious differences between the...
Symbols are utilized as an enhancement tool to stress the theme of each story. Hawthorne uses names and objects to enhance the theme, and Jackson mainly utilizes names to stress the theme, although she does have one object as a symbol of g...
Shirley Jackson (1919–65) is an American writer, b. San Francisco. She is best known for her stories and novels of horror and the occult, rendered more terrifying because they are set against realistic, everyday backgrounds. Her works inclu...
they are. First we see how everybody has traditionally defined roles within the community: men, women and even children know well how they are expected to behave. Men are the dominating part; they have the right to make decisions for their ...
that a good harvest can be had, this is the philosophy on which most human’s believed and exist. Introduction The novel lottery is horrible and shocking at most. The story narrates the killing of a lady, Mrs. Hutchins by her family and fri...
they’re carrying out, the villagers and their groundwork’s appear innocuous, even quaint: they’ve nominated a rather pathetic man to lead the lottery, and young children run about accumulating stones in the town square. (Jackson 2) Themes T...
story starts during first round of lottery, when heads of families open folded paper. Hutchinson's family has black spot in his slip, which symbolizes their death. Mrs. Hutchinson struggles to reverse conflict by saying: "You didn't give hi...