Raymond Carver Cathedral Essay

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Imagination can only occur when one lets go of the physical aspect of sight. Raymond Carver’s Cathedral explores the human resistance to the unknown and unfamiliar, and how a relationship can transform hostility into creativity. The story begins with an introduction to the narrator who has difficulty differentiating sight and understanding. He is described as a stiff man who has limited emotional capacity. The narrator introduces his wife’s blind friend, Robert, to the reader with a note of jealousy. He continuously puts down Robert and seems intimidated by his sight impairment. Although Robert is blind, he is able to “see” more than the narrator in many ways. Raymond Carver’s short story Cathedral has an allegorical structure: a blind man reveals a new insight …show more content…

He pitied this man and refused to believe he could actually be a capable human. The narrator says, “My idea of blindness came from the movies. In the movies, the blind move slowly and never laugh. Sometimes they were led by seeing-eye dogs. A blind man in my house was not something I looked forward to” (Carver 1). It is obvious that the speaker is dreading this experience and is unable to fathom that this blind man might be rich in personality and not simply a burden. His lack of interest and empathy are the narrator’s disability, a kind of blindness to seeing others beyond stereotypes and biased opinions. Raymond Carver uses this obvious metaphor of a physically blind man to bring some new insight to his narrative. Carver recognizes the tendency of humans to be ignorant to the unknown and shows the reader an example of moving past that ignorance. When the narrator is finally able to let go of his narrow-mindedness, his imagination is able to bloom. In the short story Cathedral, Raymond Carver uses the experience of trying to describe and then draw a cathedral together to reveal an awakening through a shared imaginative

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