Carver Cathedral Essay

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    In the story “Cathedral”, author, Raymond Carver, show the readers that a person does not need their eyes to see as sight has a deeper meaning for different people. Within the story, the narrator, husband, describe his experience with his wife’s longtime friend Robert, a blind man who came to visit after losing his own wife to cancer. The story takes place in the husband’s home somewhere in the East Coast near Connecticut. As the husband has a drink and waits for his wife’s arrival with Robert, the

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    The short story, “Cathedral,” by Raymond Carver is written in first person point of view. The narrator has a strong antipathy for an old friend that will soon be visiting his wife. The old friend, Robert, is blind and the husband feels like this disability will be a burden. The Irony of this is the narrator is oblivious to his own limitations. The narrator is not literally blind, but he displays a lack of observation and self-awareness that makes him blinder that Robert. Robert’s wife had recently

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    In the story, “Cathedral,” written by Raymond Carver he is illustrating stereotypes by displaying the narrator’s reaction to meeting Robert. Throughout the story the narrator illustrates how or what blind people do and how they live their lives. The narrator says, “I’d always though dark glasses are a must for the blind” (Carver,144). Before Robert arrived to his home he already made many different assumptions about him. The narrator did not understand how a blind person lived. “I don’t have and

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    disabilities, “Cathedral, written by Raymond Carver, seems like a cringe-worthy story filled with racist slurs, horrific social pitfalls, and a bonding experience that is incredibly unrealistic. The story, revolving around a blind man named Robert and the narrator, has a deeper meaning, however, when its style and key elements are analyzed. Raymond Carver’s use of Minimalistic style which reveals illusions in society and an honest first person point of view in his narrative “Cathedral” explicates Robert

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    The Narrator’s Misjudgement In Raymond Carver’s “Cathedral”, the short story takes place in the post-modern era where drug use, praise of the military, and racial prejudice are prominent in society. Carver portrays these attitudes through the development and conflict between his characters. Accordingly, the narrator/protagonist, who is not given a name, is depicted as a closed-minded, racist, and stubborn man and displays his beliefs through his actions towards the antagonist, Robert. As a round

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    “The Cathedral” by Raymond Carver is an eye opening short story which focuses on an unnamed narrator who has a hard time interacting with the world around him, specifically his new visitor. The narrator is the perfect example of an antihero as he is the central character, but does not exhibit heroic attributes. In this first-person narrative, the narrator speaks of when his wife’s old friend, Robert, comes to visit. After Robert’s wife passes on, he stops by the narrator’s house for a night while

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    You Don’t Always See with Your Eyes In the story “Cathedral”, author, Raymond Carver, show the readers that a person does not need their eyes to see as sight has a deeper meaning for different people. Within the story, the narrator, husband, describe his experience with his wife’s longtime friend Robert, a blind man who came to visit after losing his own wife to cancer. The story takes place in the husbands home somewhere in the East Coast near Connecticut. As the husband has a drink and waits for

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    Reasoning Behind the Unfamiliar In Raymond Carver’s story “Cathedral” there are many signs of prejudice, jealousy, misunderstandings and eventually what may appear to possibly be a development of friendship. There is a fair amount of preconceived judgment made by the narrator in regards to an old friend coming to visit his wife. At the beginning of the story the narrator refers to the old friend as “the blind man” (Carver 455) and makes it clear that he “wasn’t enthusiastic about his visit.”

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    In “Cathedral,” Carver’s use of visualization and climactic change of character emphasizes the theme that looking and seeing are two very different things. When Raymond Carver had his wife’s blind friend, Robert, join them for a few days, he should’ve been more understanding and empathetic with Robert’s blindness instead of just avoiding it or brushing it off as if it’s not there. Carver did very well in changing his ways and learning to accept and understand Robert. Carver also did a good job of

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    Lucy Stark Mrs. Stultz English 203 15 Nov 2017 Raymond Carver: The Man Behind the Stories The story of award winning author, Raymond Carver, is as detailed and intricate as the stories he wrote. He was born in Oregon in 1938. His father was a sawmill worker. He married one year out of high school and had two children. He worked various jobs to support his small family and in the late 1960s and throughout the 1970s he began drinking heavily. When he got his drinking problem under control, he began

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