Chief Bromden In One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest

927 Words2 Pages

The way characters interact with situations in novels can vary. Some characters are of a pragmatic ideology while others prefer to respond to their environments in an idealistic way. Through the way that the characters choose to react to life is how they can answer to conflict within their world. The conflicts that the characters face can have a profound impact on their character based on their ideology to life. Characters that portray this are from One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest such as Nurse Ratched; a woman who has a set idea of what life should be like. Nurse Ratched sees life through an unrealistic lens while Chief Bromden is more aware of his surroundings and is a true-to-life character.
Chief Bromden is a realistic character because …show more content…

Chief Bromden is a relatable and realistic character because of his struggle with self-image, as a man of six feet eight inches he knows people perceive him as small and invisible. Bromden feigns to be deaf and mute because he realized that people were not paying attention to him when he spoke, “it wasn’t me that started acting deaf; it was the people that first started acting like I was too dumb to hear or see or say anything at all.” The beginning of this problem occurs when officials came to his reservation and acted as if Bromden did not speak. This is to say that Bromden was not hiding behind something that he was not but rather adapting to it because of the conflict within himself of self-image. McMurphy is Bromden’s incentive for change because McMurphy helped him realize that he could be strong again and that there is such a thing as a choice. It is because of McMurphy that the haze that Bromden had been living with finally cleared up, “For the first time in years I was seeing people with none of that black outline they used to have, and one night I was even able to see out the windows.” McMurphy is the incentive that helps Bromden realize that there is more to life besides the set rules of the Combine and the asylum, he sees that he could be free and happy by escaping. The view of realism helps Chief Bromden finally realize that while the asylum is an …show more content…

She believes that the patients should act a certain way and follow all of her rules. Nurse Ratched is meticulous in everything she does, she does not believe in disorder and “tends to get real put out if something keeps her outfit from running like a smooth, accurate, precision made machine.” Nurse Ratched desires and posses full order and control in her mental ward, and this ideology is unrealistic to true life. The ‘Big Nurse’ sees life through a lens of restraint and sameness and she wishes to get the mental ward patients to adapt to this mindset by enforcing harsh and totalitarian control over them. It is important to reflect on the ignorance of Nurse Ratched’s own state. She believes that a prime example of trouble is McMurphy because he is a manipulator but she herself fits this description. Nurse Ratched believes McMurphy is “ a ‘manipulator’… a man who will use everyone and everything to his own ends.” Nurse Ratched is unaware that she too makes the patients reveal their innermost secrets and turn on each other with her manipulation to get her own gains. Nurse Ratched represents a microcosm of how society in the 1950’s desired people to be: they desired order and effectiveness. The Red Scare led everyone to want “normalcy” and so differences were widely

Open Document