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.

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Presentation transcript:

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 identify rituals &/or traditions you are aware of. 2. What do you think the short story “The Lottery” will be about? What do you know about Lotteries?

Objective: I will be making inferences and predictions from “The Lottery.” In order to do this, I will need to make text predictions before reading, during reading, and I will create visual representations as well as lists of characters and settings. To show this, I will have a completed section in my journal with predictions, lists, visual representations, and connections.

Academic Vocabulary: The Lottery Scapegoat a person or group made to bear the blame for others or to suffer in their place. Archetype the original pattern or model from which all things of the same kind are copied or on which they are based; a model or first form;prototype. Rituals an established or prescribed procedure for a religious or other rite. Traditions the handing down of statements, beliefs, legends, customs, information, etc., from generation to generation, especially by word of mouth or by practice. Irony the use of words to convey a meaning that is the opposite of its literal meaning:the irony of her reply, “How nice!” when I said I had to work al l weekend.

THE LOTTERY Read together as a class.

Make a T-chart under you prediction During After

Students will write their first impressions of: the setting, the mood, the village, Mr. Summers, Mr. Graves, and the townspeople in general. STOP AT 4 TH PARAGRAPH

Vocabulary Add vocabulary words under T chart as the class reads. 1 st word: jovial 2 nd word: paraphernalia

Read paragraphs 5,6,7 Add impressions of the black box and the lottery spectacle to the first column of the T-chart. We know that the townspeople will draw from the box for the lottery. In the left margin, brainstorm what they could be drawing for.

Question 1: Why is Mrs. Hutchinson late? Is it important?

Stop at “joking with everybody.” We have just learned the purpose of the lottery. What conclusions can you draw from this last paragraph. Write 2 inferences you made.

Stop at “’it isn’t fair’” How did the mood just change? Look back at your predictions? Do you have the same prediction now? If not, write a new prediction based on this new information.

Finish the story Write one thing that stunned you the most. Go to the second section of your T-chart. Now that the story if finished, write your impressions in the After column On a separate sheet of paper, work on the discussion questions with your shoulder partner.

Video of the Lottery

Questions 1. Why has Jackson chosen common people for her characters? Could she have chosen characters from other levels of sophistication with the same effect? What is the irony of the tone of this story? By choosing common people, Jackson is attempting to have the general reader relate to the grotesque situation at hand. The dangers of blind allegiance to tradition become more “close to home” when an average, small-town American population is the center of the action. It becomes more general and all-applicable. (Lines 1-17) 2. What seems to have been the original purpose of the lottery? What do people believe about it? The original purpose of the lottery seems to have been some twisted sort of rain dance ritual. As Old Man Warner explains, the old saying used to exclaim, “Lottery in June, corn be heavy soon” (line 122). It takes on an air of Aztec/ritualistic sacrifice, that by performing the blood ritual and sacrificing one, the needs of the majority will be met. If the ritual is not followed, society will collapse – or so the townsfolk believe.

Questions 3. Is it important that the original paraphernalia for the lottery had been lost? What do you suppose the original ceremony was like? Why have some of the villages given up this practice? Why hasn't this one? The loss of the original ceremonial paraphernalia is significant, as it suggests that the original meaning and reasons for the lottery have been lost to time. It is a ritual with no true purpose, other than that of blind allegiance to tradition. Some villages presumably have matured beyond this ritual, but this one has not. 4. What is the significance of Tessie's final scream, "It isn't fair, it isn't right"? What aspect of the lottery does she explicitly challenge; what aspect goes unquestioned? There are two ways to approach this question. 1) From an in-character perspective, Tessie is objecting to the fact that she is the subject of the sacrifice, having been the “winner” of the lottery. She doesn’t want to die, and is protesting merely the fact that she has to die, not that people die in general. 2) From an authorial / reader response perspective, Jackson challenges the reader to question the idea of conformity and blind allegiance to tradition. If we don’t know why we observe a specific tradition, perhaps we should question its usefulness. Besides, it’s good to question and analyze.

Questions 5. This is a different sort of story when you read it for the second time. What elements (such as Mrs. Hutchinson's attempt to have her daughter, Eva, draw with the family) might take on a different meaning the second time through? Tessie’s attempt to have her daughter draw with the family is a half-baked (and somewhat heartless) attempt to have a larger pool of “winners” (victims) to draw from. While reading, it sort of sounds like she wants an extra chance to win some money or something of that nature. In reality, she is trying to provide more of a buffer between herself and being murdered. 6. Some critics insist that the story has an added symbolic meaning. Do you agree? If so, what is Shirley Jackson trying to tell us about ourselves? (Hint: Consider that this story was written during the height of the rise of Communism and the Soviet Union.) She is providing a symbol of societies such as Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union, where great atrocities are committed under the indifferent watch of tradition-oriented conformists. She is trying to tell us that we should be guided by our moral compass, not merely by the expectations of society. If something is unjust or wrong, we should stand up against it. 7. Is the lottery a collective act of murder? Is it morally justified? Is tradition sufficient justification for such actions? How would you respond to cultures that are different from ours that perform "strange" rituals? Effectively, the lottery is by definition a collective act of murder, regardless of the reason it is held. Its existence does, however, beg the question of whether tradition (and, by extension, moral relativism) supersedes any sort of universal morality. Is killing wrong no matter what, or does its intended purpose – prosperity for the many at the expense of the few – justified? Regardless of the answer, Jackson’s message is that doing anything simply because it’s “what always has been done” is not an acceptable approach to life. We should question and analyze our traditions, and understand why we continue to observe them.