Madness In Ken Kesey's 'One Flew Over The Cuckoos Nest'

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Jacqueline Hein Hein 1 Fay 20th Century Lit. May, 2014 Who’s the Cuckoo? Rules are good. Rules keep bad people from doing unthinkably horrible things. But sometimes, it seems as if the rules our society has made for us are in place only to suppress what shouldn’t be. Rules that say “you have to look this way” or “act like this or you’re weird”. Creativity, individuality, and freedom can be seen as crazy. This conflict between normalcy and madness is explored in Ken Kesey’s novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. Society is presented as a ruthless machine that makes everyone conform to its narrow rules. With rules that deem people unworthy, all individuality is squeezed out of people, and the natural, joyful expressions of life are suppressed. Ken Kesey offers his readers a question: Do society’s rules for us come with malintent? In the hospital ward, where the majority of the book takes place, the representative of society is the Big Nurse, or Nurse Ratchet. At first glance, she seems to be just another decent person trying to help her patients, but at a closer look we are able to see the repression she represents. She embodies order, efficiency, repression, and tyranny. She acts as the rules do in our society. Always needing to “repair” those Hein 2 who do not fit into its model. This becomes evident when Nurse's tactics are shown. Rather than seeking a cure for the patients and offering them the assistance they need, the nurse responds by using invasive lobotomies, electroshock therapy , and group "therapy sessions" that more closely resemble a "pecking party" to damage the masculinity of the patients under her (Kesey 27). As seen in the therapy session with Harding, the nurse aimed for his biggest insecu... ... middle of paper ... ...ion or out of fear, he hallucinates fog drifting into the ward. Although it can be frightening at times, Chief considers the fog to be a safe place; he can hide in it and ignore reality. Beyond what it means for this character alone, the fog represents the state of mind that Ratched imposes on the patients with her strict, mind-numbing routines and treatment. When McMurphy arrives, he brings a new perspective to the men, and frees them from the fog. All in all, this novel is meant to show us how society can restrict us without our knowledge. If we allow it, we will become just like the “mental” patients in Nurse Ratched’s ward; ignorant conformists, who don’t question the horrible ways they’re being treated. So really, who are the crazies? The people who may act a little odd, or the ones watching us all and judging who is fit enough to be accepted as normal?

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