Monday, January 6, 2020
Tone, Diction, And Narration Of Carver s Cathedral
Alex Ramsbottom Dr. Vella 16 October 2015 AP English 4 Tone, Diction, and Narration of Carverââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"Cathedralâ⬠First-person narration can provide an exotic and perhaps unreliable viewpoint. The narratorââ¬â¢s thoughts and feelings are conveyed more clairvoyantly than possible in third or even second person, an effect that develops a more intimate and relevant story to the reader. In Cathedral, Raymond Carver uses conversational tone and diction to expose the narrator s character: prejudicial at first, sympathetic by the end. Knowing his character simplifies the understanding of major components of the story such as the narrator s hostility to Robert and his epiphany at the end. Carver portrays the personality of the narrator in Cathedral in his use of conversational and colloquial tone. Carverââ¬â¢s syntactic maneuvers deliver a tone that is mocking, unpleasant and even vitriolic. He hyphenates the narratorââ¬â¢s interjections to convey a sarcastic quality of the narrator. For example: as the narrator is describing the sensitive situation of Beulahââ¬â¢s death, he does so with a taste of wickedness: After they had been inseparable for eight years--my wife s word, inseparable--Beulahââ¬â¢s health went into rapid decline (Norton 30). The hyphenation permits the narrator to present his hostility and mockery into any part of the story; thus, the narrator feels that his opinions and asides are more important than the plot. Throughout the story, he displays a dislike for many seemingly
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