The discrimination in short stories, Harrison Bergeron, Dear Alphonse, and The Lottery discrimination features are the foundation after the story, Harrison Bergeron, Dear Alphonse and Lottery. Discrimination refers to those who are disliked by sex, gender, or nationality, or are acting terribly. In the short story, discrimination consciousness of the author is expressed through various roles. In these stories, the authors draw their own emotions and thoughts through their own roles.
Shirley Jackson's "After Your Dear Alphonse" Note The story I decided to interpret is written by Shirley Jackson's "After Your Dear Alphonse". Shirley Jackson was born in 1919 and died in 1965. She is best known for her stories, horror, and mystery novels. They are even worse because they are against the real common local context. After graduating from Syracuse University, Jackson married literary critic Stanley Edgar Hayman. - What happens if the utopia is not perfect? Ursula K. Le Guin's "The Man Who Leaves The Omelas" and Shirley Jackson's "The Lottery" talk about religion and the theme of traditional symbolism. Lottery "shows that what looks very perfect outside is not that good.
As a result of this simple story, as a result of this story, "lottery", death, and "Harrison Belerger" is a loss of human experience. Furthermore, one of the "lotteries" in "Old Man Warner" remembered that this was his "seventy-seventh time to participate in a draw" (Jackson 141). This shows that every citizen accepts the tradition of stone people every year. This is the main reason why "lottery" exists continuously. As citizens accepted the tradition, they now blindly follow the tradition that violates many human ethics. As many people want a better situation, many people forget to understand what they have now. Another similarity of "Harrison Bergeron" and "The Lottery" is that the hero is having an unfortunate ending.