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Religious Extremism in “Imagine no Heaven” and “The Lottery”

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Jackson’s and Rushdie’s short story and essay both illustrate the logical fallacy of “appeal to tradition” as well as showing that the consequences of blind faith can be deadly. Both encourage the reader to develop their own morality and to question authority. “The Lottery” tells the story of a village that has a tradition of selecting a member of their community to be stoned to death annually in the springtime.

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Religious Extremism in “Imagine no Heaven” and “The Lottery”

Jackson’s and Rushdie’s short story and essay both illustrate the logical fallacy of

“appeal to tradition” as well as showing that the consequences of blind faith can be deadly. Both

encourage the reader to develop their own morality and to question authority. “The Lottery” tells

the story of a village that has a tradition of selecting a member of their community to be stoned

to death annually in the springtime. Rushdie’s essay encourages secular thought, and argues that

religion stunts people in terms of moral development, along with some negative consequences

for society.

Rushdie begins his essay by stating that humans begin their lives questioning the best

way to live and why they exist. He calls humanity a “notoriously inquisitive species” (Rushdie).

In contrast, the children in Jackson’s story begin to pile up rocks on their own, emulating the

behavior and rituals of the adults around them. “Bobby Martin ducked under his mother's

grasping hand and ran, laughing, back to the pile of stones” (Jackson). It is the adults, and Tess

who loses the lottery in particular, who question but do not interfere with the lottery.

Both “The Lottery” and “Imagine No Heaven” focus on the negative consequences of

unquestioning tradition and faith. Rushdie notes that too many people are being born because of

religious strictures that speak out against birth control. Rushdie also notes that, much like the

person to be stoned in “The Lottery,” religious fanatics will target the defenseless and powerless.

He cites the example of Hindu fundamentalists targeting minority Muslims, American

fundamentalists targeting abortion doctors, and Iran targeting a Jewish minority (Rushdie).

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Morality in “Imagine no Heaven” is not allowed to develop for the individual. “To my

mind, religion, even at its most sophisticated, essentially infantilizes our ethical selves by setting

infallible moral Arbiters and irredeemably immoral Tempters above us: the eternal parents, good

and bad, light and dark, of the supernatural realm” (Rushdie). In other words, this morality is

absolute. The assumption can be drawn that disagreement can cause the arguer to be branded

amoral or a heretic.

So too are the members of the village where the lottery is held judgmental of people who

question the lottery, or offer up alternatives to murdering a resident every year. Old Man Warner

comments that people in the north village who have given up the lottery are “crazy fools”

(Jackson). He defends using the lottery by worrying that all of civilization will unravel if they

abandon the tradition (people will give up agriculture and go back to living in caves), and also

that there is a supernatural consequence to not holding the lottery. This consequence is the failure

of the corn crop. This is an example of irony, because agriculture is a science and crop failure

can be explained by physical phenomena (drought).

Tess Hutchinson arrives late but is happy to be there, making jokes. However, when she

gets the piece of paper with the black dot, she first states that her husband’s time to select was

not fair, and finally that the entire process is not right before she is killed. Mr. Dunbar has

broken his leg, and the reader may think that he will be sympathetic to someone getting hurt, but

he is not. Delacroix, who was talking to Tess earlier, selects the largest rock.

In “The Lottery” there are a few breaks with tradition. The box does not contain wooden

pieces, but instead has pieces of paper. This is because the population has grown. There used to

be a ritual salute, but this has been forgotten, as well as tuneless chanting and a recital. There is

conversation and joking, which Old Man Warner also makes negative comments about. The box

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Uploaded on
February 21, 2025
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February 27, 2025
Number of pages
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Written in
2021/2022
Type
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Grade
A
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