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Character Analysis Of Raymond Carver 's ' Cathedral '

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Character Analysis in Raymond Carver’s “Cathedral”: The Narrator Literature has the potential to act as a mirror by presenting people’s lived experiences, expectations, and perceptions through characters. Such is what can be deciphered through the analysis of different characters in Raymond Carver’s story “Cathedral.” This paper focuses on the narrator of the story portrayed by the author as blind, which is used metaphorically not to imply physical blindness, but the inability to have reasoned judgment others referred to as lack of emotional intelligence. The presentation of the narrator, as a fallible individual, contributes to the development of the theme and plot of the story because, through them, the reader can learn about other …show more content…

“I don’t have any blind friends,” I said.
“You don’t have any friends,” she said.” (Carver 3)

The conversation portrays that the narrator lives a secluded and solitary life, and has resorted to seeking to conform through drinking a lot of scotch and smoking marijuana.
This point of view is corroborated in Kirk Nesset’s article called ““Insularity and Self-Enlargement in Raymond Carver’s ‘Cathedral,” who observes that “Raymond Carver 's fiction is characterized by characters that tend toward insularity and isolation.” (16) The narrator’s solitary life can be attributed to their behavior of profiling and stereotype other people. For instance, he thinks that Beulah, the blind man’s late wife, was a woman of color by her name
I didn’t answer. She’d told me a little about the blind man’s wife. Her name was Beulah. Beulah! That’s a name for a colored woman.
“Was his wife a Negro?” I asked.
“Are you crazy?” my wife said. “Have you just flipped or something?” She picked up a potato. I saw it hit the floor, then roll under the stove. “What’s wrong with you?” she said. “Are you

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