The Lottery Shirley Jackson Table of Contents Plot Overview Character List Quotations Study Questions Foreshadowing Themes & Symbols Plot Overview Character.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Ági Hello. My name’s Ági and I’m a 10th course student in our grammar school. I really feel good here, love my classmates, we have been getting on well.
Advertisements

Word List A.
Dolch Words.
The Lottery Shirley Jackson
“The Monkey’s Paw” Literary Elements.
Thank You, Ma’am The Lottery
The Honor Project: Not Lying By: Madison, Chris, Tyler, Matt, Connor & Dave.
Keeper By: Mal Peet Date/year published: February 13, 2007 Genre: Realistic Fiction Ryan Nixon Period 2 11/29/12.
“The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Tradition “Lottery in June, corn be heavy soon” ( ). ◦ The stoning was a sacrifice made for good crops ◦ Sacrifice.
 Football Review Game
‘The Lottery’ by Shirley Jackson
“The Lottery” Worksheet Review.
SHIRLEY JACKSON What is a lottery?
By Shirley Jackson.  Published in 1948 in ‘The New Yorker’.  Caused uproar and thousands of people cancelled their subscriptions to ‘The New Yorker’.
Making Inferences An inference is the ability to connect what is in the text with what is in the mind to create an educated guess. (Beers, 2003) So, an.
“THE LOTTERY” BY SHIRLEY JACKSON Ms. Dymek 7 th Grade English.
“The Lottery” “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson. Allusions: Ancient Ritual Sacrifice In ancient Greece, Athenians believed that human sacrifice promised fertile.
“The Lottery” Shirley Jackson
A Short Story... The Lottery by Shirley Jackson
‘The Lottery’ by Shirley Jackson
“The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson
“The Gift of the Magi” By: Camden Grant, Jasper Raines, & Jerrod Hathcock.
Questions What is the setting (time, place, weather) of the story? What is the setting (time, place, weather) of the story? The story takes place in early.
Flow and rhythm in your writing..  Bad example: Jordan was a very handsome boy. Jordan had blue eyes. Jordan liked to smile because he had white teeth.
English Language Arts Level 7 #11. Today’s Objectives Literary Element: Conflict The Short Story: “The Lottery,” by Shirley Jackson Idiom of the Day.
Grade 7 Source Analysis The Fight!. Are all primary sources reliable? What are the good points and bad points of primary sources. What is bias– could.
S TORY I NTERPRETATION. “T HE L OTTERY ” The mundane – typical – everyone knows everyone Normal town Normal names Mr. Summers In charge of lottery The.
You can type your own categories and points values in this game board. Type your questions and answers in the slides we’ve provided. When you’re in slide.
Wednesday 9/9/15 (Journal Section)
Grade 9 Literature Theme.
Irony and Ambiguity Holt Chapter 5.
Distance By Raymond Carver.
Help others that are in need By: Ronnia Casper. Raising Money for Tom Robinson’s Family Tom’s wife and children are going through a lot. Tom is in jail.
THIS IS With Host... Your Peanuts/ Louisa Reading Terms “Charles”“Possibility of Evil” Trivia “The Lottery”
Group 2 張顥耀 余安立 蕭文秋 吳怡萱 郭又瑋
WEDNESDAY 9/9/15 (JOURNAL SECTION) 1. How important do you think rituals and traditions are to our culture, families, &/or groups? In answering this prompt.
March 31  Turn in both Writing Assignments  Reading Quiz  Discuss chapter 5, Tone and Style  Discuss chapter 6, Theme  Discuss chapter 7, Symbol 
By Shirley Jackson Literary Analysis
Jeopardy Veldt/ Wasteland Contents Lit. Terms A&P/Gentle Rain Raymond.
N5 Prose ‘The Lottery’ by Shirley Jackson. The Danger of Blindly Following Tradition The village lottery culminates in a violent murder each year, a bizarre.
Lesson 42. Today’s Agenda 1.Finish up “A Rose for Emily” by William Faulkner 1.Collect any handouts that need collecting! 2.“The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson.
Lesson 43.
Shirley Jackson’s story “The Lottery” ends with the brutal killing of Tessie Hutchinson. Does the story also show the powerlessness of women? Does this.
Sight Words.
SHORT STORY NARRATIVES ELEMENTS OF PLOT. The Gift of the Magi Exposition: Jim and Della, a young married couple with little money, struggle to find the.
Scary Slumber Party Erin December 2011 This is a choose your adventure story. Remember, make your decisions carefully when you are given choices. Your.
How The Death of a Salesman uses the theme of Identity Crisis.
Lesson 20. Today’s Agenda 1.Finish up “A Rose for Emily” by William Faulkner 1.Characterization 2.Foreshadowing 3.Conflict 4.Supporting Evidence 2.“The.
Welcome everyone to Large Group worship! Introduce today’s Connect Question. We are going to play a really fun game! Small Group Leaders, help me split.
The Lottery by Shirley Jackson.
Inferences Draw conclusions about setting, characters, and plot based on information and details in the text. Make inferences by evaluating words and.
AP Language & Composition Model Edgar Allan Poe Presentation
THE LOTTERY Brittany Rhodes Literature Presentation.
Created By Sherri Desseau Click to begin TACOMA SCREENING INSTRUMENT FIRST GRADE.
Hints of what’s to come….  Clues the author gives to help the reader make predictions.  Used to help build suspense  Used to keep a reader’s interest.
Vocabulary Definitions / Examples
Symbolism, Irony, Vocabulary
Bell Work 9-13 October “The Lottery” Shirley Jackson
Jeopardy Final Jeopardy Authors Setting Vocab Plot Fig.Lang. $100 $100
Short Story Unit Test Review of stories.
“The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson
Empathy By Julianna Stone.
“The Lottery” By Shirley Jackson.
Vocabulary Definitions / Examples
Short Story Unit Test Review of stories.
Mr. Whitehead’s Review Game
Activator Review the guided reading notes on “The Lottery”
Tessie Hutchinson The unlucky loser of the lottery.
Presentation transcript:

The Lottery Shirley Jackson Table of Contents Plot Overview Character List Quotations Study Questions Foreshadowing Themes & Symbols Plot Overview Character List Quotations Study Questions Foreshadowing Themes & Symbols Click here to make your own wordle! -> Creative Corner: Go to Sparknotes.com to see examples of good ways to write. The Lottery rating Buy The Lottery at Amazon.com Amazon.com Ask Mrs. Rob Help with grammar, writing, and reports. Contact:

The Lottery, by Shirley Jackson, is about a small town in the summer. It starts out sounding happy and bright, with kids playing in the dirt and adults gossiping. There is a black box in the middle of the town. Eventually, the lottery starts and everyone gets quieter, although still seemingly calm. One by one, the man of each family starts drawing pieces of paper from black box to find the ‘winner’ of the lottery. Next, one man gets a black dot on his paper, he knowing that one member of his family will be the ‘winner’. Then, each member of the ‘winning’ family chooses a piece of paper, making the man’s wife ‘win’ to be the sacrifice for others in her town.

Mr. Summers is the man that helps the people get the papers. He is in charge of all of the activities in the town. Mr. Hutchinson is the man of the family, so he gets his family’s paper. His family later on gets the black dot. When the family members get their own ‘chance’ to ‘win’, Tessie Hutchinson is the ‘winner’. Tessie is mad that she won and she doesn’t think that its fair. The lottery has been done for a long time, since before Old Man Warner was born. The old man thinks it would be crazy to stop the lottery. The man that writes up the papers to be drawn is Mr. Graves. Mr. Graves digs the graves for the future winner.

“You didn’t give him time enough to take any paper he wanted. I saw you. It wasn’t fair!” Tessie says this to Mr. Summers after she found out that her family wins the lottery. This shows how badly she doesn’t want to win. “There’s Don and Eva, make them take their chance!” says Mrs. Hutchinson. This shows that she is selfish and thinks her life is worth living, even if it means her own kids will die. ‘Nancy and Bill, Jr., opened theirs at the same time, both beamed and laughed, turning around to the crowd and holding their slips of paper above their heads.’ This shows that they are selfish and that they don’t value each other, only themselves.

Why is it that the people think it is so crazy that other town stopped the lottery? The people are following the crowd by not stopping the lottery. If the people were asked to really think about if sacrificing a town member, maybe even a family member, they would probably realize that hurting people is not worth it for their crops. Why is it that the people seem so calm even though the know someone is going to die? The people seem okay with this because they figure that there chance of dying is so low and even so it would be for a good cause, so why not enjoy the time while you have it?

One action of foreshadowing is in the beginning when the children were gathering stones. At the time it seemed like they were gathering stones to play a game, but they were really gathering stones for the winner of the lottery. Another act of foreshadowing is when Tessie Hutchinson arrive late to the lottery. Tessie seems like she is going against something. She also was saying it wasn’t fair when her family got the dot. This is foreshadowing that she will be the winner of the lottery and she will be going against it, even though at the time, we didn’t know it. Lastly, foreshadowing is shown by the adults. The adults speak about their farms, rain, and tractors. This is showing that they are worried about their farms and it is foreshadowing that their worries will take over lives.

Symbols The black box symbolizes darkness and scariness. The fact that the box has been around for so long that shows the horrible tradition. The box is splintery which could symbolize pain and ancient hardship. Even the image of the box may symbolize the chance of death for the people of the town Themes ‘Following the crowd can have disastrous consequences’. This means that sometimes people do things and they don’t realize what they’re doing, but they are doing it because everyone else is. ‘ The wickedness of the common man or woman on the street can be just as shocking and horrifying as the heinous crime of a serial killer or a sadistic head of state’. This means that sometimes people may seem innocent, but they can end up doing things that are no better, maybe even worse than that of a serial killer.

Feinbueg, Johnathan. "Wordle." Wordle - Beautiful Word Clouds. Web. 28 Jan "The Lottery by Shirley Jackson - from the Short Story Library at American Literature." Short Stories & Classic Literature from around the World. Web. 28 Jan