Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
The Lottery by Shirley Jackson
Background information and Setting
2
The Lottery The story enhances the contemporary reader's uneasy sense that the group violence in the story could be taking place anywhere and everywhere, right now.
3
Why Should I Care? If you've ever been hanging out with a group of friends and done something truly stupid, you may have heard the term, "If your friends jumped off a bridge, would you jump, too?" Your answer is probably "no," but Shirley Jackson disagrees.
4
Why Should I Care? She thinks you – and anyone and everyone – would race off that bridge if your community decided it was necessary. According to her, while individuals may be great, a group of people is another animal. An animal that eats its own.
5
Peer Pressure and Tradition
First there's peer pressure and the exclusion of one person to give the remaining community members a bonding experience Second is tradition, which is what prevents any of the villagers from questioning their roles in ritualistic murder.
6
Tradition "You think tradition's so great and meaningful, but look how it deadens people's abilities to think for themselves!" – Shriley Jackson And it's sometimes true that we don't think about the origins or significance of many of our regular traditions
7
Setting Setting is the physical location and time in which a story takes place. To identify setting, we must note the specific details the author provides concerning: The story’s location. The time in which the action takes place. The social environment of the characters, including the manners, customs, and moral values that govern their society.
8
What is it Mr. E? While we often associate setting with “where” and “when,” it also has an emotional effect and can create a mood or atmosphere. Mood is the feeling that a text conveys to readers.
9
Purpose Authors deliberately choose a setting and include specific details to conjure a certain reaction/feeling in their readers. Once I have identified the story’s setting, I can identify the mood by asking : What things, thoughts, or feelings do I typically associate these details with? Given this, what mood is the author trying to create?
10
Examples old, abandoned house= What’s the mood? What do you feel?
warm, sunny beach= What’s the mood? What do you feel?
11
Setting as Foreshadowing
As readers, it’s not enough to just note where and when the story takes place. By identifying the setting and the mood it conjures, we can make better predictions about what may happen in the text. To do this, I should ask myself: What is the setting, and the mood it conjures, leading me to think might happen? What do I need to be aware of as I continue reading?
12
Setting as Foreshadowing: Lord of the Flies
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.