Archetypes In One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest

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Ken Kesey’s, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, is a work of literature that explores the concept of falsely diagnosing an individual who is sane. Randle Patrick McMurphy clearly falls into this concepts exhibited throughout the novel. McMurphy, a rebellious and rowdy man, enters a mental hospital. His singing and laughing could be heard throughout the ward. This fiery redhead challenges Nurse Ratched policies on the ward, and makes numerous attempts to get the patients on the ward to rebel against her. He disobeys Ratched’s rules by gambling inside the ward, helping Billy Bibbit lose his virginity, and allowing prostitutes to roam the hallways freely at night. McMurphy’s attempts to break free from Ratched’s dictatorship slowly starts to wane. McMurphy, later, gets into a violent fight with one of Ratched’s …show more content…

Jung emphasizes this point by stating, “The Mother archetype takes the form of personal mother, grandmother, stepmother, mother in law, nurse, and governess…yet it can have a negative meaning- the loving mother or the terrible mother or goddess of fate” (Jung 2). A mother figure can be exhibited under numerous titles in a novel, and is not always perceived as the nurturing female who wants the best for their young ones. It is obvious that motherly figures, especially in literature, can manipulate the individuals they are supposed to care for. Nurse Ratched is no exception, “Understand, I would like to believe something else- for your poor mother’s sake…He did. And Harding! And the-the-the rest! They t-teased me, called me things!” (Kesey 315) Ratched only cares about resuming total power over her ward again, and could care less about Billy Bibbit’s emotional stability. She uses Bibbit’s mother as a decoy in order to make this fragile individual confess the names of the other patients responsible for the shenanigans that took place the night

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