One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest Insanity

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In Ken Kesey's "One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest" a psychiatric ward becomes a demonstration of how society views are of cruel character. This novel is about one patient that takes a stand against the authoritarian staff that operates a mental institution, but it represents much more than just a typical case of people versus the business. The questions that come to mind by Kesey are virtually as chilling as his vivid stories of inmate abuse and power struggles. Kesey makes us question just how thin the line is that separates insanity from sanity, and treatment from control. The novel constantly shows how authorities that control an individual using subtle and coercive methods of control. Kesey demonstrates the struggles of personality against an institution of mindless conformity. “One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest" is a significant piece of literature of how our society has become. …show more content…

She is the ward superintendent, the ultimate authority demanding obedience and perfect order from everyone". She is compared as being powerful in this establishment and how the government is powerful indicating and enforces rules and regulations. Nurse Ratched, being the nurse in charge, uses the upper hand, forces the patients to go through any form of medication in the name of therapy. The narrator of the novel, The Chief, pretends to be mute and deaf protecting himself from pain and humiliation. His character is symbolic to the way society was very silent in the fifties until people could not take anymore and began to show how they felt with vengeance. McMurphy rescues the Chief from his silence, and in return, he rescues McMurphy from being a vegetable for the remained of this

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