


It is included in numerous anthologies and often assigned to students, despite its initial chilly reception. “The Lottery” holds a unique place in American literature due to its wide recognition.

Like Anne, Tessie presents a figure who speaks out against the structure of the lottery and the village and is sacrificed by her fellow villagers. The name Tessie Hutchinson may be an intentional allusion to Anne Hutchinson, a 17th century historical figure in Rhode Island who was declared heretical by the Puritan religious powers of the time and who was banished from her village. Other critics have placed Jackson’s work in conversation with Puritan traditions and characters, pointing out the family structure of the village and the Puritan values of hard work, tradition, and strict adherence to rules. The primitive nature of the farming village is emphasized with the ancient weapon of stones, connecting Jackson’s story to more ancient events, primarily the practice of ritual sacrifice and stoning as a Biblical punishment. ”The Lottery” may have been put in motion by hearing of these atrocities, but there are universal and timeless aspects to her story as well. WWII exposed people all over the world to a new extent of human cruelty and violence, as accounts of the deeds of the Nazis and the horrors taking place in concentration camps slowly came to light. By her admission, Jackson intended the story to point out the human capacity for violence. “The Lottery” appeared in print a few years after the end of World War II. She was only 48 years old, although her health had declined in the years prior due to her diet and smoking habit, as well as her use of various drugs to combat lifelong neurosis. Jackson died in her sleep due to heart failure in 1965. Jackson is best known for her short story “The Lottery” (1948), and for her ghost story “The Haunting of Hill House” (1959). Both husband and wife enjoyed socializing and hosting events, and they had a wide circle of literary friends, which included Ralph Ellison. Hyman worked as a professor at Bennington College, and Jackson spent her time writing. After Hyman and Jackson married, the pair moved to and spent the remainder of Jackson’s life in North Bennington, Vermont. Hyman was also a lover of literature and would go on to become a successful critic. As a student, Jackson worked for the campus literary magazine, where she met her future husband, Stanley Edgar Hyman. Jackson’s family then moved to Rochester, New York, where she attended high school and later college at the University of Rochester, although she ultimately completed her degree in 1940 at Syracuse University. This setting would feature in her first novel, The Road Through the Wall, which was published when Jackson was 32 years old. Shirley Jackson was born in San Francisco to affluent, middle-class parents, and she grew up in a suburb.
