Thursday, January 23, 2020
Disjunction versus Communion in Raymond Carvers Short Stories Essay
 Disjunction versus Communion in Raymond Carver's Short Stories      Raymond Carver, poet, essayist, and short story writer, was very  different from some other writers in that he clipped his writing until only the  essential remained. " Carver not only acknowledged the effect that fiction  could have on readers, he proclaimed that it should affect readers."( Bonetti  58) Thus, when Carver writes about intimate relationships, the reader perceives  the stories as more than entertainment or skillful language; the reader relates  to the characters' situations and applies the knowledge to their own lives. It  is within this realm of character affirmation that Carver draws a much more  elaborate, and meaningful detail in his short stories. I propose that Carver's  characters either connect or fail to connect on an intimate, spiritual level.  It is this difference in his short stories which either draw the reader into or  away from the meaning. These relations make certain writings in Carver's stories  more interesting.  More directly, it is the communion in his later writings, and the  disjunction in his earlier writings, that distinguish the two types of styles.  Communion within the characters of Carver's later writings, as in his  collections in Cathedral, create much more depth and interest in his stories.  It is within this scope of communion that Carver's stories seem to become more  fulfilling with character affirmation.  Communion occurs in Carver's stories when several conditions are  satisfied. The difference in the two criteria; communion and disjunction, is  simply defined. "Communion, n 1. A sharing of thoughts or feelings 2. a A  religious or spiritual fellowship." (Websters, 141) It is a connection  between characters which allows them to transcend the ordinary and redefine  themselves. A moment in which words, actions, and objects take on exaggerated  significance . Carver uses this bond between characters in his later writings  more directly, such as in his anthology Cathedral. You must first initialize  an intimate interaction between two or more characters who can communicate---  either verbally or physically. If an individual is still projecting his/her  personality onto another, that individual has not experienced the loss of self-  awareness which is necessary for communion. Another important element for this  experience is touch. The charac...              ...ders and move them to  action in their own lives.      Works Cited    Bonetti, Kay. " Ray Carver: Keeping." Conversations with Raymond Carver.  Marshall Bruce Gentry and William L. Stull, eds. Jackson, Mississippi  :University Press of Mississippi, 1990. 53-61.    Carver, Raymond. Cathedral. New York: Vintage Books, 1989.    ---. No Heroics Please. New York: Vintage Books, 1992.    ---. What We Talk About When We Talk About Love. New York: Vintage Books, 1989.    Davis, Alan. " The Holiness of Ordinary. " Hudson Review. Vol.45 Winter 1993:  653-658    Gardner, John. On Moral Fiction. New York: Basic Books, Inc., Publishers, 1978.      Halpert, Sam. " Interviews" â⬠¦when we talk about Raymond Carver. Peregrine  Smith, Library of Congress Cataloging-in-publishing, 1991. 51-84    Sexton, David. " David Sexton talks to Raymond Carver." Conversations With  Raymond Carver. Marshall Bruce Gentry and William L.Stull, eds. Jackson,  Mississippi: University of Mississippi, 1990. 120-132.    Stull, William L. " Matters of Life and Death. " Conversations with Raymond  Carver. Marshall Bruce Gentry and William L. Stull eds. Jackson, Mississippi:  University Press of Mississippi, 1990. 177-191.                         
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