"The
Lottery" might be the most famous American short story. Written by
Shirley Jackson and published in the New Yorker in 1948, it tells of an
unnamed American town where, once a year, residents draw slips of paper
from a black box, choosing one person to be murdered by the rest of the
village.
Jackson, whose writing wrestles with social propriety
and discomfort, hated to comment on her own work. When "The Lottery" was
first published, The New Yorker was inundated with thousands of
letters, many of which expressed readers' confusion. The magazine had
never received so much feedback about any short story. Jackson kept mum.
Later, however, she confided to a friend that the story was an allegory
for anti-Semitism and violence in the modern world. A fascinating
detail, considering the year of its publication.
Jackson's
interest in anti-Semitism was personal. Her marriage to a Jewish English
professor and jazz critic named Stanley Hyman was a subject of great
speculation and controversy for both of their families—and, thankfully,
inspired great literature.
- Matthue Roth for Jewniverse
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