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Everyday Evil in the Works of Shirley Jackson By Stephen Matthew Williams Troy University Professor Elizabeth Owens English 1102
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Everyday Evil in the Works of Shirley Jackson

Nov 29, 2014

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Page 1: Everyday Evil in the Works of Shirley Jackson

Everyday Evil in the Works of Shirley Jackson

By Stephen Matthew Williams

Troy University

Professor Elizabeth Owens

English 1102

Page 2: Everyday Evil in the Works of Shirley Jackson

About the Author

• Born in 1916

• Award winning author of numerous novels and short story collections.

• Frequently featured in The New Yorker

Page 3: Everyday Evil in the Works of Shirley Jackson

About the Author

• Most famous story is “The Lottery”

• She has become more popular and more frequently analyzed since her death in 1965

Page 4: Everyday Evil in the Works of Shirley Jackson

Everyday Evil

• Throughout Shirley Jackson’s work, there is a common theme of “everyday evil”.

• She examines the human capacity for prejudice, conformity, cruelty, and violence

• She also uses contemporary settings to force readers to look inward and realize humanity is scarier than we care to admit.

Page 5: Everyday Evil in the Works of Shirley Jackson

Works to Examine

• Short Stories• “The Summer People”

• “The Lottery”

• “The Witch”

• “The Renegade”

• Novels• We Have Always Lived in the Castle”

Page 6: Everyday Evil in the Works of Shirley Jackson

“The Summer People”

• Tells the story of an older couple who decide to stay in their summer home in the fall.

• They are met with hostility from the townspeople who distrust city folk going against tradition.

Page 7: Everyday Evil in the Works of Shirley Jackson

“The Summer People”

• The townspeople cut off their supplies, cut their phone lines, and leave them stranded and awaiting death.

• Speaks to the prejudice of tight-knit communities against outsiders

Page 8: Everyday Evil in the Works of Shirley Jackson

“The Lottery”

• A small village annually draws slips of paper to determine who “wins” the town lottery.

• The chosen villager is stoned to death by their fellow citizens, including their own family members.

Page 9: Everyday Evil in the Works of Shirley Jackson

“The Lottery”

• The real-world setting shocks the reader at humanity’s capacity for violence.

• The story is a commentary on blindly following tradition and the dangers of group-mentality.

Page 10: Everyday Evil in the Works of Shirley Jackson

“The Witch”

• A young boy occupies his time staring out the window of a train, and claims to see a threatening witch staring back.

• An old man enters the train and begins recounting to the boy, the horrific way in which he murdered his sister.

Page 11: Everyday Evil in the Works of Shirley Jackson

“The Witch”

• The kind-looking old man is far more terrifying than the imaginary witch.

• Highlights the cruelty and violence hiding beneath a seemingly ordinary human being.

Page 12: Everyday Evil in the Works of Shirley Jackson

“The Renegade”

• A family of city folk, the Walpoles, move to the country

• Mrs. Walpole is informed that her dog Lady is killing neighborhood chickens.

• The townsfolk convict the dog without proof and demand it be shot.

Page 13: Everyday Evil in the Works of Shirley Jackson

“The Renegade”

• Others suggest malicious ways of hurting the dog to deter her from future attacks.

• Mrs. Walpole is shocked when her own children join in one the cruel talk.

• Surrounded by cruelty and malice, Mrs. Walpole wonders if the townsfolk and her children might eventually get violent with her as well.

Page 14: Everyday Evil in the Works of Shirley Jackson

Children in Jackson’s Work

Like in “The Renegade” Jackson often gives the children in her story a sinister side to shock the

reader.

She makes the point that its not just adults that hold the capacity for cruelty.

Page 15: Everyday Evil in the Works of Shirley Jackson

We Have Always Lived in the Castle

• The final novel written by Shirley Jackson

• Concerns the Blackwood girls: a pair of reclusive sisters who met with suspicion after the poisoning of their family six years ago.

• Combines themes of prejudice, conformity, cruelty, and violence

Page 16: Everyday Evil in the Works of Shirley Jackson

Jackson Examines Evil on Both Sides

The Villagers• Treat the girls poorly

despite lack of proof

• Mock and taunt Merricat Blackwood when she comes into town

• Act joyful when the Blackwood house is on fire

• Represent conformity and prejudice

The Blackwood Girls• History of prejudice feelings

against the villagers

• Poisoned their own family years ago

• Burn down the house to evict an unwanted guest.

• Jackson elicits sympathy for these characters because of their harsh upbringing, but still points out the evil within them.

Page 17: Everyday Evil in the Works of Shirley Jackson

Use of Setting

• All of these works are set in ordinary places

• Small Towns

• Grocery Stores

• Trains

• Jackson’s use of real-world settings make us realize that there is evil hiding beneath the familiar.

Page 18: Everyday Evil in the Works of Shirley Jackson

In Conclusion….

• Shirley Jackson is a writer with something to say about humanity.

• The Summer People”, “The Lottery”, “The Witch”, “The Renegade”, and We Have Always Lived in the Castle speak to the prejudice and cruelty of human beings.

• Her use of cotemporary settings contribute to the common theme in her writing: “everyday evil”