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What Is The Message Of The Cathedral By Raymond Carver

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Raymond Carver’s short story “The Cathedral” is one that was published with a collection of other books in 1983. This particular short story is one that presents multiple views, including real life ethical and stereotypical situations correlating with the specific time this story was published in. Through these ideas and also the symbols created through the characters one receives a vital message. This message that the author is trying to convey is to look further past what one may see at your first encounter, whether or not it be a person and even an actual intangible or tangible thing. The author tries to help one realize; to truly understand a person or thing one must not let past or present presumptions of the subject cloud your …show more content…

Carver presents the story through a negative viewpoint through the narrator, opposed to the much more open minded wife because it helps aid his message. It’s arguable, but you can make the point that the narrator becomes more ethically just due to his interaction with this blind man at the end of the story. Nonetheless going from not wanting to be in the presence of this blind man to actually sitting down; talking, and drawing with this blind man shows, even stereotypes can be changed if subjected to a positive influence. In addition to the use of stereotypes and ethical views the author used another next key element to develop his message and purpose. This element was the use of symbols that were developed and interpreted through the characters and their situations in this story. The most important of these symbols is arguably blindness. Now in a sense, I do mean the actual blindness of Robert the blind man; however, there is also the idea of being oblivious or blind not in your eyes, but in feeling. This idea is visible through the relationship of the narrator and his wife. Ironically this whole story may not be a thing if not for the blindness, or rather the inability of this narrator to see the needs and wants of his wife. The wife who the narrator explains attempted suicide in her last marriage due to, the

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