Blind Man Essay

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    is forced by his wife to meet and entertain her longtime friend Robert- who happens to be blind. The husband is not exactly excited by this visit. The author illustrates the characters’ development beginning as apprehensive and jealous, transitioning to more of an uncomfortable feeling, and finally ending with acceptance as the husband is put into a situation where he gains a new understanding of the blind man. He ends the story with his eyes closed and a mind open to a new view of the world. As the

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    Robert’s choices. An example of this takes place when the narrator believes Robert would not smoke due to his blindness. The narrator remembers, “having read somewhere that the blind didn’t smoke because, as speculation had it, they couldn’t see the smoke they exhaled. I thought I knew that much and that much only about blind people.” (Carver 107). To the narrator’s surprise, Robert does in fact smoke. The narrator’s ignorance allowed for him to believe blindness would truly affect this in the first

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    In “Cathedral”, although the unnamed narrator deems the blind man, Robert, inferior, his critical, inner monologue reveals that he’s truly insecure while the blind man, who never judges, appears entirely self-assured, thereby suggesting that Raymond Carver finds true power in acceptance. In fact, Carver exposes that the narrator’s superiority complex only masks the narrator’s underlying insecurity by strategically setting the story before zoning in on both the husband’s diction, as well as his selection

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    relationship his wife has with the blind man Robert. Robert may be the blind person in this story but the narrator is the one with limitations in sight. Even though the narrator can physically see, he himself places limitations on what he can see, meaning while Robert can only imagine what things look like and can open his mind to the possibilities and the beauty in everything the

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    “Cathedral”, it tells the story of a man whose wife one summer, worked for a blind man. The blind man and the husband’s wife, kept in touch throughout the years by sending cassettes back and forth in the mail. The blind man’s wife recently died and the husband’s wife invites him to say in her home, but her husband is displeased by this request. In the beginning of the story, the husband is very rude to the blind man and finds amusement by making fun of the blind man’s disability. Throughout the

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    friend, who happens to be blind. His wife has just died, so he is going to stay with the narrator and his wife for a bit. The narrator is very passive aggressive towards him and even pulls childish pranks on him. Eventually the two are left alone and the narrator realizes how narrow-minded he has been his entire life. In Carver’s Cathedral, the narrator’s lack of social depth and tolerance for others mimics that of the societal norm, which reverses when his wife’s blind friend, Robert, strains the

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    about a blind man who stays with the narrator and his wife, and the personal growth of the narrator that takes place throughout the night. The story opens at the home of the narrator and his wife as the blind man, who is an old friend of the wife, is on his way to visit his recently deceased wife’s relatives. Conflict in the story stems from the narrators apparent distaste for blind people and him not wanting a bind person to stay in their home. Throughout the night the wife and blind man discuss

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    right of the beginning with: “And his being blind bothered me. My idea of blindness came from the movie, the blind moved slowly and never laughed”, this very quote showed me the author did not care this man was blind nor did he have an understanding of blind people. He made his own guess based on watching a movie and this feeling was true to him as this is what he believed. This quote also showed me that he

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    throughout his life as an alcoholic. In 1977, throughout many obstacles Raymond Carver became sober. Raymond Carver while writing Cathedral had been sober for six years. In Cathedral, Raymond Carver writes about the narrator, Bub, his wife, and a blind man named Robert. The setting is in 1981 in a middle-class home of Bub and his wife in New York in a single evening, (shmoop). While Bub and Robert start off having their own differences, Bub’s wife and Robert have a connection that Bub cannot grasp

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    Sometimes led by seeing eye dogs. A blind man in my house was not something I looked forward to.” (Carver 200). We realize that the narrator did not think much of Robert even before he has ever met him. After meeting him and trying to draw the cathedral, he was told by Robert to close his eyes and continue. At the end, we can see the growth of the narrator and his feeling towards Robert and blind men in general. When he’s told to open his eyes: “‘Well?’ he said.

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