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Faith In Raymond Carver's Cathedral

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At the heart of Raymond Carver’s 1983 short story Cathedral is a peculiar, yet honest take on the role of faith in self-realization. Cathedral casts a contrast nearly as poignant and striking as the Biblical teaching “flesh versus spirit,” and that is no surprise given that this is his aim. As Carver leads his readers on this walk of faith, he first sets out to depict those pretensions that bar men from seeing themselves as they are: powerless. It is the ignorance of this truth that at first renders the narrator hopeless. It is the knowledge of this truth that in the end grants the blind man true power. Through the utilization of cathedrals as a figure of likeness and a point of contrast, Cathedral presents a two-sided coin: the fine line between …show more content…

Whether it be by the twenty-seven references to Robert as “the blind man” before the first mention of his name (pages 77-79), the appeals to speculative generalizations and stereotypes regarding the supposedly correct facial hairstyles, eyewear, and non-smoking habits of the blind (pages 80, 81), or even his inquiry into the skin color of Robert’s dead wife (page 79), the narrator is not shy about expressing his shallow obsession with the appearance of things. As he said himself, “…his being blind bothered me,” (page 77). And to his dismay, “this…blind man was coming to sleep in my house” (page 79). Notably, Robert is the only character named, and the significance of this is lies in the narrator’s demeanor towards other characters. He was cautious and possessive over his wife (page 80), defensive over himself and his name (page 78), and dismissive of her ex-husband …show more content…

It is this difference in demeanor, not physical ability and inability alone, that Carver uses to craft his contrast between the blind man and the narrator. The narrator shies away from potentially difficult interactions, preferring to skirt them away by alcohol and drugs. Robert indulges his host in his habits, but only so far as he can maintain his mind (page 83). Robert is instead in pursuit of a relationship the narrator thought him incapable of, a relationship invested in seeing the value, wonder, and capacity within people. Faith is how you look at the unseen, even the unforeseeable’s, embracing them with an expectation of a good outcome, contrary even to how things might seem. Incapable of judging by appearance, Robert welcomes only an experience which goes beyond shallow judgments; all was common to him, blind and seeing alike, and all was in its own way holy. In this, he assumes what he cannot see, the satisfying conclusion to his efforts, and like one building a cathedral that he will never see completed, he must have faith in the potential of others. Thus he considers the wife’s conscious presence only a hindrance to this aim (page 84), though a welcome partner in reflection for him, not a suitable medium for

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