Raymond Carver is a writer who is known for a distinct style and also for distinct themes. The style is what is usually refers to as 'minimalist.' The themes common to his stories include the basics of life and people's struggles. What is most significant about his subjects is that they are not significant. Rather than focus on anything obviously meaningful, Carver focuses on the realities of the average life, not dressing up the details, but instead focusing on the gritty details that make it real. The stories also tend to focus on issues like loss and violence and drunkenness and rarely provide a happy ending. Each of these distinctive features of Carver's stories can be traced to his own life, with the themes and styles representing Carver's own experiences and his observations of people around him. In this way, Carver's stories are largely autobiographical.
Before considering how Carver's life impacted on his work, it is useful to give a brief biography of his life. Carver was born in Oregon to parents who both worked in low-paying jobs and struggled to support the family. Carver's alcoholic father died at age 53, leaving Carver's mother to support the family. Carver began working at unskilled jobs early in his life and married at age 20, already having two children to his wife Christine (Garraty & Carnes). Carver, like his father, began drinking early, developing the alcoholism that would continue for half of his life. Carver's drinking continued until 1977, accompanied by financial and marital problems. In 1977 he entered rehab for alcoholism. It was in this period after beating the alcoholism that Carver's short story collections were released. These included Will You Please Be Quiet, Please? (1977), What We Talk About When We Talk About Love (1981), Cathedral (1984), and Where I'm Calling From (1988). Carver died of lung cancer in 1988. (Pearson Education).
The struggle of Carver's life shows where he got his material for his stories from. It is been said that, "He experienced blue-collar desperation on terms more intimate than have most American writers" (Pearson Education). It is this 'blue-collar desperation' that became the theme for many of his stories. The stories did not attempt to show perfect lives or perfect people, instead Carver focused on presenting real experiences. The majority of the stories are not based on particularly interesting events, instead the events themselves are usually quite boring. However, by focusing on the gritty details, Carver injects interest into the stories. The short story "Why Don't You Dance," published as part of What We Talk About When We Talk About Love describes a man who sells his furniture on his front lawn after his marriage breaks up. The bed becomes the focus of the story, with a young couple arriving and offering to buy the bed. This is a prime example of Carver's understated approach. The story hints at the sadness of the situation, yet this is never stated. The story begin with the lines, "In the kitchen, he poured another drink and looked at the bedroom suite in the front yard" (Carver 3). The story is told without offering the emotions of the man. Like many of his stories, the emotion is present but is hidden within the story and never outwardly expressed. One author describes the meaning of the story, saying that the main character "metaphorically externalizes his failed marriage on the front lawn and then silently watches a young couple repeat that failure in 'play'" (May 72). While this theme underlies the events, it is not on the surface. There is no conflict where the man rises above his failed marriage and redeems himself. Instead, it is just a day in the life of the man with no meaningful conclusion. Rather than focus on overcoming problems, it just presents the basic struggles of life. This is how Carver presents realistic stories, by not focusing on any significant events that saves the characters or changes their lives, but instead representing the quiet desperation of their lives. Considering Carver's own life, this approach can be understood. Carver grew up and lived in a world where lives were lived in quiet desperation. His father did not overcome his drunkenness, instead he died at the age of 53. His mother was not saved by something miraculous, instead she struggled to support a family after the death of her alcoholic husband. And Carver himself had a life of constant struggle, battling...
Robert lost his wife, he is blind, and he is forced to interact with a person that the narrator believes he feels attracted to. All of these problems seem to be unimportant for the man and this influences the narrator in acknowledging his personal misery. The narrator accepts that he is doomed to being miserable because he is unable to appreciate life and the privileges that nature provided him
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Raymond Carver was born in Clatskanie, Oregon, in 1938. Carver began his career as a writer as a poet but is more well-known for his prowess in the art of short stories, for which he is widely regarded as the preeminent storyteller of his time. Carver himself is often quoted as saying: "I began as a poet, my first publication was a poem. So I suppose on my tombstone I'd
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" This essay is well-written and well-constructed. The writer refers to the primary source material liberally and provides in-text citations as well as a bibliography. However, the writer could use active voice more often. For example, the sentence "The use of different point-of-view for the narration of the story has great influence on how the elements of characterization and setting are presented" could be rewritten and presented in active voice: "...great
Shannon Raymond Carver's "Cathedral" This is a short story that is told majorly from the eyes of a character referred to here as 'Bub' who is a husband to a woman who had a blind friend, Robert who comes to visit and the visit turns out to be a self search time for Bub and great revelation period for him. The story employs strong use of symbolism as well as motifs to present
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