Carver's "Cathedral"
An Analysis of Theme and Plot in Carver's "Cathedral"
Raymond Carver states that by the mid-1960s he had tired of reading and writing "long narrative fiction" ("On Writing" 46). Shorter fiction, he found, was more immediate. Flannery O'Connor states a similar idea in The Habit of Being: for her, the novel was a literary medium that could bog down all of one's creative powers. Turning to a short story was a way of escape: "My novel is at an impasse. In fact it has been at one for as long as I can remember. Before Christmas I couldn't stand it any longer so I began a short story. It's like escaping from the penitentiary" (O'Connor 127). This mode of thought may help us to understand why Carver turned to composing shorter works of fiction like "Cathedral," a work that acts as a brief glimpse into how one man's physical blindness helps another man begin to overcome his own spiritual blindness. Carver's thematic plots could convey meaning at alternate depths -- both directly and indirectly. "Cathedral," for example, introduces the theme of blindness, personified by "this blind man," (Carver "Cathedral") but concludes by addressing the deeper theme of internal (or spiritual) blindness -- like Sophocles does in Oedipus Rex. While conveying meaning on a literal level, the host of the blind man in "Cathedral" presents a scene...
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