Question
Question 5 (1 point)
Saved
Esperanza's parents dream of winning the lottery. Esperanza is actually annoyed by this fantasy. What bigger idea does "winning the lottery" really represent in the novel?
Question 5 options:
Rich people can do whatever they want to do and don't care about others.
The lottery is an immoral way for the government to make money.
Our lives are controlled by luck. If good things happen, you just got lucky.
The lottery system is rigged and unfair.
Saved
Esperanza's parents dream of winning the lottery. Esperanza is actually annoyed by this fantasy. What bigger idea does "winning the lottery" really represent in the novel?
Question 5 options:
Rich people can do whatever they want to do and don't care about others.
The lottery is an immoral way for the government to make money.
Our lives are controlled by luck. If good things happen, you just got lucky.
The lottery system is rigged and unfair.
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The option that best fits the symbolism of "winning the lottery" in the context of the novel is:
**Our lives are controlled by luck. If good things happen, you just got lucky.**
This idea encapsulates the notion that relying on luck, as represented by the lottery, can symbolize a lack of control over one's fate, which can be a central theme in many narratives.
**Our lives are controlled by luck. If good things happen, you just got lucky.**
This idea encapsulates the notion that relying on luck, as represented by the lottery, can symbolize a lack of control over one's fate, which can be a central theme in many narratives.
There are no human answers yet. A form for humans to post answers is coming very soon!