One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest Analysis

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In Ken Kesey’s One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, the combine and the ward in psychiatric hospital are two communities with starkly different principles. The Combine consists of those who are associated with the government, such as Nurse Ratched, the black boys, and Dr. Spivey. Scanlon, Dale Harding, Cheswick, Billy Bibbit, Chief Bromden, and Randle McMurphy are all patients on the ward. McMurphy has himself committed to the ward, even though he is mentally stable, because he is too lazy to do the work in prison. After McMurphy joins the ward, the patients become more inquisitive and enthusiastic, as he brings a scheming, boisterous energy to a group with low-self confidence. Ultimately, McMurphy’s self-serving, impetuous attitude in the ward …show more content…

Immediately, he understands that the only way to achieve a leadership role within the ward is through each patient’s vulnerability. McMurphy accomplishes this criticising of others during the weekly therapeutic meetings. By explaining to the patients that “[Nurse Ratched] ain’t peckin’ at [their] eyes” but “at [their] balls, buddy, at [their] everlovin’ balls”, McMurphy forces them to realize that Nurse Ratched has suppressed their masculinity, but at the same time, he uses a similar approach to acquire dominance within the group (59). McMurphy gains the patients’ trust by making them feel as though they need him to gain freedom, when in reality, he is selfish and positioning himself to get the control he desires within the ward. Furthermore, McMurphy takes advantage of Chief, through his silence, in order to make easy money off the other patients. Not only did McMurphy make Chief “[feel] like [he’d] helped him cheat them out of their money”, but deep down Chief knew that they all feel that “something had been kicked out from under them” due to McMurphy’s constant gambling (269). While the patients do not want to admit it, they know McMurphy is scamming them, but they do not have the strength to rebel against

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