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Cathedral (Raymond Carver) 17716 Views
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Description:
Can you imagine what it would be like to be without the gift of sight? In "Cathedral," the narrator helps a blind man envision a cathedral by guiding him to draw one. Why a cathedral? Is the story evoking the importance of religion? Does the author think that cathedrals are the most glorious man-made sight? Are they just extremely peaceful?
Transcript
- 00:01
Cathedral, a la Shmoop. For those of us blessed with the gift of vision…
- 00:11
…it’s hard to imagine going through life without being able to see anything.
- 00:16
And yet, some of us with 20/20 eyesight still walk into a surprising number of walls.
- 00:23
In Raymond Carver’s short story, Cathedral…
- 00:26
…the narrator helps Robert, a blind man, to envision in his mind’s eye what a cathedral
Full Transcript
- 00:33
looks like…
- 00:34
…by allowing him to hold his hand while he draws one on a sheet of paper.
- 00:40
Sounds like somebody was jonesing for a little physical contact…
- 00:44
Okay… honestly… it was a pretty cool thing that he did.
- 00:49
But we have to wonder… why a cathedral?
- 00:53
Since it’s the title of the story, Carver must have put a lot of thought into it.
- 00:58
What made him decide to choose this subject as his centerpiece, instead of, say… a willow
- 01:02
tree, or… a Waffle House? Naturally, the first thing that comes to mind
- 01:07
is religion. The celebration and practice of a religion is, after all, what a cathedral
- 01:13
is for.
- 01:14
Was Carver insinuating that this activity was a religious experience?
- 01:19
You might certainly argue that it was for Robert, who having never seen a cathedral,
- 01:28
suddenly felt as if he could picture it perfectly.
- 01:32
But it also might have been something of a spiritual awakening for the narrator…
- 01:35
…whose opinion of blind people seems to have changed in the process.
- 01:39
It’s going to be a while before he parks in a handicapped parking space again.
- 01:43
But then we think… if that was the case, why not just a church? Why did it have to
- 01:48
be a cathedral?
- 01:49
A cathedral is bigger and grander than any church.
- 01:53
When you enter one, no matter your religious inclination, you can’t help but be bowled
- 01:56
over by its grandiose majesty.
- 02:01
Was this Carver’s idea of the most glorious man-made sight someone could witness?
- 02:06
Maybe Robert was supposed to feel enveloped by his imaginary surroundings… and overwhelmed
- 02:11
by its size. Third possibility…
- 02:14
Cathedrals are quiet, peaceful places… is that the aspect Carver was focusing on?
- 02:21
Both Robert and the narrator were in a sort of Zen-like state when the drawing was finished.
- 02:28
In the silence, each man experienced a revelation.
- 02:31
Did they just need the world’s volume button turned down for a few minutes…
- 02:35
…so they could hear themselves think? What was the reason that Carver went with
- 02:39
a Cathedral?
- 02:40
Was it a reflection of religious experiences?
- 02:43
A place that inspires?
- 02:45
Or a hub… away from the hubbub? Shmoop amongst yourselves.
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