Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Cathedral Carver, Raymond - Arthur A. Brown (essay date Winter 1990)


Cathedral Carver, Raymond - Arthur A. Brown (essay date Winter 1990)

Arthur A. Brown (essay date Winter 1990)

SOURCE: "Raymond Carver and Postmodern Humanism," in Critique, Vol. XXXI, No. 2, pp. 125-36.

[In the following essay, Brown—a professor at the University of California, Davis—argues that Cathedral is not a radical departure from Carver's style, but an example of his postmodern humanist writing.]

When Raymond Carver wrote "Cathedral," he recognized that it was "totally different in conception and execution from any stories that [had] come before." He goes on to say, "There was an opening up when I wrote the story. I knew I'd gone as far the other way as I could or wanted to go, cutting everything down to the marrow, not just to the bone. Any farther in that direction and I'd be at a dead end" (Fires 204). He began to write longer stories, and his characters started to see things more clearly. Perhaps Carver was exaggerating, however, when he said that "Cathedral" was "totally"...

[The entire page is 6110 words long]

Join eNotes

The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the: