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The Blindness Of The Seeing Characters In Raymond Carver's Cathedral

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The Blindness of the Seeing Characters in Raymond Carver’s “Cathedral” “And his being blind bothered me. My idea of blindness came from the movies. In the movies, the blind moved slowly and never laughed...A blind man in my house was not something I looked forward to.” The main character and narrator of Raymond Carver’s “Cathedral” harbors such predetermined assumptions about his wife’s visiting friend, Robert, who happens to be blind. Throughout the story, the narrator describes his wife’s past, which includes details about her first love, how her acquaintance with Robert came to be, and Robert’s impression on her life in the preceding years as they exchanged audiotapes to keep up with one another. Robert’s arrival and company begins to defy and change the narrator’s postulated ideas about blind individuals and even influences the narrator to act more open-minded. Nearing the end of the story, when the television portrays certain European cathedrals, Robert requests that the narrator draw a cathedral with him and has him close his eyes, which ultimately alters his understanding of himself and the world. As many elements of the story reflect Raymond Carver’s own life, the audience can gain a sense of his personality through the narrator and Robert. Through the narrator’s need for intoxication, narrative style, and his depiction of his wife and Robert, the irony that even though the narrator and his wife are not blind, they are still missing a sense of satisfaction in their lives while Robert, unable to see, understands the world and the key to happiness. Some aspects of Raymond Carver personal life exist as certain details in “Cathedral”. While simultaneously being a well acclaimed writer, Carver dealt with major alcoholism problems to which he was even hospitalized several times due to intoxication. Such an aspect of alcoholism is present in “Cathedral” as the three main characters consume copious amounts of alcoholic drinks throughout the span of the story. Carver also married his high school girlfriend, Maryann Burk, much like the narrator’s wife had married her high school sweetheart. However, according to Stephen King, Carver was quite abusive and violent, especially when under the influence of

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