Raymond Carver and "Cathedral", John Updyck and "A & P", "Cathedral" and A & P are short stories written in the same century. But even if they all introduce the role of stereotypes that change their perception of the world in some way, they have a different side. The atmosphere of the story is different from the number of people involved in each story. The story "cathedral" occurs only in family homes, husbands, and wives can be identified as suicide attempts in the past, and finally as static roles as blind people.
Relationship between "Cathedral" and "A & P" "Rather the cathedral" and "A & P" of Raymond Carver and John Updike are short stories even if they were written in the same century. I can explain the difference in what actually happens. They all introduced stereotype characters of the hero, but for some reason these characters made a major change in the recognition of the hero's world and the life itself. The atmosphere of these stories, unlike the number of people involved in each story, may be important to understand how changes will occur.
Raymond Carver and "Cathedral", John Updyck and "A & P", "Cathedral" and A & P are short stories written in the same century. But even if they all introduce the role of stereotypes that change their perception of the world in some way, they have a different side. The atmosphere of the story is different from the number of people involved in each story. The story "cathedral" occurs only in family homes, husbands, and wives can be identified as suicide attempts in the past, and finally as static roles as blind people.
The cathedral is a short story by Raymond Carver. This story forms a sarcastic situation in which the blind man teaches the foresightful person to "see" truly for the first time. Near the end of the story, Carver drew two characters together in the cathedral's picture as a symbolic nucleus of the story. The narrator found at a very early stage that blinds are not particularly wanted in my house. In most stories, he observed one by one and revealed his shallowness. In the next excerpt, he imagines that a blind wife must feel in her bed of death.