
A lottery no one wants to draw: How June 27 became synonymous with blind tradition
When The Lottery was first published in The New Yorker on June 26, 1948, readers were shocked and horrified. The magazine received an overwhelming response from readers across the country. Reposting the story in 2021, The New Yorker reminisced: 'Jackson's short story 'The Lottery,' from 1948, inspired the most mail The New Yorker had ever received in response to a work of fiction and caused some readers to cancel their subscriptions.'
People were upset not just because of the story's dark twist, but because it hit too close to home. Jackson did not write of fantastical monsters removed from reality, she wrote about ordinary people doing something terrible simply because 'it's tradition.'
Each year on June 27, the townspeople gather to hold a lottery where one person is chosen by a random draw. The 'winner,' however, is not rewarded (spoiler alert), the town stones them to death. On the day the novel unfolds, the person selected is Tessie Hutchinson. Though she laughs and jokes at the beginning, her tone changes when her name is called. She protests, 'It wasn't fair!' But no one listens.
The sheeplike townspeople carry out the tradition without remorse. Even Tessie's young son is given a few pebbles to throw.
What makes The Lottery so disturbing is how normal everything seems. The setting is peaceful. The characters are ordinary people. The word 'lottery' usually suggests a prize or something positive. Because of this contrast, the brutal ending is even more shocking. Shirley Jackson uses this dissonance to make readers uncomfortable.
It is a warning against the dangers of blindly following tradition. The villagers do not really know why they hold the lottery. They have forgotten most of the original ritual, but they still do it every year without question.
The story also shows how ordinary people can commit violence when it is socially accepted. No one in the town feels personally responsible for Tessie's death, because everyone is participating. The calmness with which the brutal murder is narrated is a testament to how the practice has been normalised .
Even Tessie does not protest the lottery itself, only the fact that she is chosen. It speaks of pervasive collective compliance where people often ignore injustice until it affects them personally.
The Lottery continues to be taught, studied, and debated more than 75 years after it was first published. It has been adapted for stage and screen, referenced in TV shows, and included in countless anthologies. And each year, as June 27 approaches, readers are reminded of the terrifying power of tradition, and our responsibility to question it.
The Lottery reminds us that the most frightening monsters are not always fictional, most of the time they hide in plain sight: smiling, laughing, and following the rules.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NDTV
5 hours ago
- NDTV
Auction Of World's Largest Mars Meteorite Sparks Ownership Debate
United States: The recent auction of a Martian meteorite -- for a record-grabbing $5.3 million at Sotheby's New York -- has sparked questions over its provenance and renewed debate over who gets to claim rocks fallen from the heavens. The hefty 54-pound (25-kilogram) stone is the largest Martian meteorite ever discovered on Earth, according to its Sotheby's listing, and was found in November 2023 in the vast Saharan desert in Niger. The government of Niger has announced that it will open an investigation following the auction, saying it appears to "have all the characteristics of illicit international trafficking." On Friday, the government suspended exports of precious stones and meteorites until further notice. Sotheby's has rejected the accusations, insisting that the meteorite was "was exported from Niger and transported in line with all relevant international procedure." In light of the controversy, however, a review of the case is underway, a Sotheby's spokesperson told AFP. "The stone journeyed 140 million miles through space, and hurtled through Earth's atmosphere before crashing in the Sahara Desert," the Sotheby's listing said. Following its discovery, the jagged, ochre-colored stone was then sold to an international dealer, briefly exhibited in Italy, and eventually ended up in the auction catalog in New York. For American paleontologist Paul Sereno, who has worked closely with Niger's authorities for years, all signs suggest that the stone left the country "illicitly." "Everybody's anonymous -- from the person who found it, the dealers, the guy who bought it, everybody's anonymous," he told AFP, making no secret of his frustration. "If they had put on baseball gloves and caught the meteorite as was hurtling towards Earth before it landed in any country, they could claim it... but I'm sorry, it landed there. It belongs to Niger," he said. - 'We should respect it' - Laws governing the ownership of meteorites vary based on their point of impact. In the United States, for example, if a rock falls on private land, the property owners have ownership rights. In Niger, however, a law governs "national cultural patrimony," which includes rare mineralogical specimens, according to Matthieu Gounelle, a professor at France's National History Museum, and his father Max Gounelle, a French university professor. Both are specialists in regulations governing the collection and sale of meteorites. "In our opinion, there is no doubt that meteorites should be included among the rare mineralogical specimens" protected by Nigerien law, they told AFP. Beyond the legal battle and the possible involvement of a trafficking network, the sale of the meteorite also raises science ethics questions. The rock, named NWA 16788, has unique scientific research value. Much larger than other Martian meteorites that have been recorded to date, it offers a unique insight into the geological history of the Red Planet. Like other Martian meteorites, it is believed to have been ejected into space when an asteroid slammed into Mars. "This is nature's heritage. In many ways, it's world heritage, and it's telling us things about the cosmos. We should respect it," Sereno said. "It's not something to my mind that should be auctioned up to potentially disappear into someone's mantle."


Time of India
a day ago
- Time of India
NGT seeks DJB report on sewer line work in Sangam Vihar unauthorised colonies
New Delhi: National Green Tribunal has asked Delhi Jal Board to file a report on the current status of the work on laying a sewer line in the unauthorised colony of Sangam Vihar within four weeks. Earlier in April, DJB informed the tribunal that there were a total of 44 unauthorised colonies in Sangam Vihar, of which 33 were on encroached forest land and 11 in non-forest areas. Sewer lines have been laid in 8 of the 11 such colonies. DJB further stated that of the unauthorised colonies in the forested land, 11 were partially in the forest area while 22 colonies were completely in the forest area. A tribunal order then stated that while the issue was related to solid and liquid waste management in these colonies, the tribunal cannot give a seal of approval to the colonies developed in violation of the Forest Conservation Act, 1980, and other relevant environmental enactments. The tribunal also sought an explanation from the Union environment ministry, ministry of housing and urban affairs and Delhi forest department. You Can Also Check: Delhi AQI | Weather in Delhi | Bank Holidays in Delhi | Public Holidays in Delhi | Gold Rates Today in Delhi | Silver Rates Today in Delhi Meanwhile, in an order issued on Aug 8, a bench headed by NGT Chairperson Justice Prakash Shrivastava noted that DJB was working on laying down the pipeline in 11 colonies partially in the forest land, stating that the sewer line was being laid only in areas outside the forest area. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like American Investor Warren Buffett Recommends: 5 Books For Turning Your Life Around Blinkist: Warren Buffett's Reading List Undo "Learned counsel appearing for DJB, on instructions from Mr Gaurav, JE, DJB, submitted that no sewer line has been laid in the forest area in any of the above 44 unauthorised colonies. The above officer instructing the counsel for the DJB is directed to file an affidavit to this effect within three days. Counsel for DJB has also sought four weeks' time to file a fresh affidavit," the order stated. The tribunal had taken suo moto cognisance of a TOI report titled "A Sangam of filth and apathy, this wasteland actually exists in Delhi," published in March 2024. Stay updated with the latest local news from your city on Times of India (TOI). Check upcoming bank holidays , public holidays , and current gold rates and silver prices in your area.


Time of India
a day ago
- Time of India
BMC introduces new vehicles for waste management in Salt Lake & Rajarhat Gopalpur
1 2 Kolkata: The Bidhannagar Municipal Corporation (BMC) on Tuesday introduced 19 new vehicles of different types to collect and transport the daily generated waste from entire Salt Lake and Rajarhat Gopalpur area to the Dhapa dumping ground. The vehicles procured by BMC include 12 refuse compactors, four cesspool emptiers, two hydraulic hook loaders, and one hydraulic ladder sky lift. These were flagged off by state urban development and municipal affairs department minister Firhad Hakim, Bidhannagar MLA and fire and emergency services department minister Sujit Bose, along with BMC mayor Krishna Chakraborty and other BMC officials. "The chief minister has given me a 'mantra' to have a city free of garbage vats. In Bidhannagar, the process has started with the plan to have mobile compactors in all wards. While the waste is still being transported to Dhapa, it will be soon taken to the Patharghata waste treatment plant once it is set up," Hakim said. You Can Also Check: Kolkata AQI | Weather in Kolkata | Bank Holidays in Kolkata | Public Holidays in Kolkata | Gold Rates Today in Kolkata | Silver Rates Today in Kolkata "There are still a few who throw waste on the roadside. This has to be stopped. Also, residents need to be urged to segregate waste. More awareness on this is needed," Hakim added. BMC mayor Krishna Chakraborty said that out of the 12 refuse compactors, which have a capacity of seven cubic metric tonne each, eight of them will be used for collecting waste, and four of them will be utilised to lift the waste bins from different places. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like American Investor Warren Buffett Recommends: 5 Books For Turning Your Life Around Blinkist: Warren Buffett's Reading List Undo "Eight of these refuse compactors will collect the daily generated waste and garbage from BMC ward numbers 2, 4, 5, 7, 28, 29, 36, and 41, covering different parts of Salt Lake and Rajarhat Gopalpur," Chakraborty said. "A total of Rs 5.3 crore under the 15th finance tide fund for BMC's solid waste management has been spent to procure the vehicles. We want to have a vat-free clean Bidhannagar," Chakraborty added. Heaps of daily generated garbage and other waste were lately seen piling up in different parts of Salt Lake and Rajarhat as the old waste-carrying trucks were no longer in condition to collect and dispose of the entire daily generated waste. Bidhannagar MLA and fire minister Sujit Bose said that the problems which the civic authorities were facing over waste collecting system was now to be sorted out with the procurement of the new vehicles. BMC MMIC (drainage and waste management) Debraj Chakraborty said that more vehicles are in the process of being procured to cater to all the 41 BMC wards. "The vehicles will be centrally monitored through a GPS system," Chakraborty said. BMC is also in the process of installing display boards on all its vacant plots and water bodies across Salt Lake and Rajarhat Gopalpur, mentioning not to throw waste and garbage at the place, or else the offenders could be penalised in the range from Rs 1,000 to Rs 1 lakh. Stay updated with the latest local news from your city on Times of India (TOI). Check upcoming bank holidays , public holidays , and current gold rates and silver prices in your area.