Intro
Good afternoon, respected teacher and fellow classmates. My name is Rahul
Dhar and my roll no is 886. I am a member of group 9.
" Yas miomi odnagroup nikami sygodneya zedes, chtby provesty prezenta tsiyu.
Nasha tema - Ironya v loteryna bilete. "
Well, I've just used Russian language to describe our topic.
Let me break it down for better understanding:
I with my group members are here today to do a presentation. Our topic is "Irony
in the lottery ticket".
Well, I used russian language instead of English. It was unexpected just like as
the Irony itself is.
Our focus will be on the different types of irony found in the story—and how irony
not only builds the plot but also reflects deeper human emotions, psychology,
and social realities.
Maliha Tahsin will discuss on the author, story background and summary.
Jannatul Atika Safa will explore verbal irony in the story. I will dive into the
situational irony with its feature and evaluating from the story. Akhi will discuss
on how dramatic irony is related with the story. Akhirujjaman Rifat will analyse
the Irony of the story from a psychologicak point of view. And finally, Tauhid
Ahmed will deeply analyse how the effect and reflection of the story is relevant
still todays.
So, let's begin,, I will like to call Jannatul Atika Sultana Safa, to deliver her Speech
Good [morning/afternoon] everyone. My name is Rahul Dhar, my roll no. Is 886
Today I’m going to talk about Situational Irony and how it is shown in "The
Lottery Ticket" by Anton Chekhov.
Situational irony is a literary device where the opposite of what is expected to
happen actually happens.
🟦 Example (Simple):
A fire station burns down. 🔥🚒
We expect firefighters to stop fires, not become victims of one. That’s situational
irony.
Feature Explanation
1. Opposite Outcome—
The actual result is the opposite of what the reader or characters expected.
2. Surprise Element—
It surprises or shocks the audience or the characters.
3. Builds Humor or Sadness—Depending on the situation, irony can create
laughter or emotional depth.
Now let’s see how the situational irony unfolds through the features:
🟦 Feature 1: Opposite Outcome
> The result is the opposite of what we expect.
In the story, we expect that the hope of winning a large sum—75,000
rubles—would bring them joy, maybe a warm hug or celebration.
But the opposite happens:
They start to dream selfishly, argue in their minds, and end up hating each
other—all without even winning!
🟦 Feature 2: Surprise Element
> It shocks both the reader and the characters.
As readers, we’re shocked when Ivan Dmitritch suddenly imagines traveling
alone without his wife, even enjoying the company of other women.
He thinks of his wife as old and annoying, full of the smell of cooking, and he
regrets being with her.
His wife also gets angry silently, thinking:
“It’s nice to dream with someone else’s money!”
This shift from love to hatred happens so quickly, it surprises us.
🟦 Feature 3: Builds Humor or Sadness
> Irony can create comedy or emotional depth.
In this story, we get a mix of both.
At first, it’s almost funny how excited they are—dreaming of estates, traveling,
bathing in streams.
But soon it becomes dark and sad when their thoughts turn bitter and hateful.
And finally, the husband announces:
> “Series 9,499, number 46! Not 26!”
So they didn’t win at all.
And instead of returning to normal, their room feels “small, dark, and
depressing.”
The peace they once had is now gone—only because of a dream that never came
true.
So, the situational irony in "The Lottery Ticket" lies in this:
> We expect joy and unity from the hope of wealth, but instead, it brings conflict
and misery.
Chekhov uses this irony to show how greed and fantasy can ruin even the most
peaceful relationships.
Thank you!