Human Nature In One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest

1100 Words3 Pages

Based in an asylum and told through the eyes of one of the insane patients, the reader builds a connection with the characters as they try to fight the cruelty and control of the hospital staff. One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest is a book of high literary value, teacheing of man’s interminable struggle against society’s control over law and what it deems normal human behavior. It contains many literary devices that require readers to analyze the text in order to fully comprehend what is occurring in the story. Parents have made this book a very controversial subject, because of some of the inappropriate words and scenes in the book.The controversy over the banning of this book from school curriculum is a difficult situation because of what parents …show more content…

Human nature is a recurrent theme throughout the story; being one of the patients himself the narrator and the rest of the patients shoe this in their wish to be independent and follow their own free will. In the book the narrator often refers to the hospital staff and the government, as one force, the combine. The narrator expresses his resentment towards the combine when he takes time to reflect on his past. He recalls how “The combine… It wanted us to live in inspected houses… He fought it a long time (Kesey 187).” In this quote he remembers when he was younger and the government wanted to take the land from the Indians. As a child, he felt powerless against such a force as the government, knowing that he couldn’t do anything to stop them from taking his home. In the story, the patients periodically protest and disrupt the “combine” in an effort to follow their own free will. Students who read this novel will build a connection with the characters, as they struggle in their efforts against the combine to win their rights. Because we practice our free will on a daily basis and know that not everyone has this right in other countries, reading about people stripped of it, is not an outdated subject. Considering this book outdated is not a good reason to ban it as the lessons it teaches about human nature could never be considered

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