Psychology In The Film One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest

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One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest In the 1975 film One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, McMurphy, a man with a criminal past has once again gotten himself into trouble and is sentenced to prison by the court. In order to avoid prison, he pleads insanity and is sent to an asylum for the mentally ill. Once here, McMurphy suffers and witnesses the abuse and exploitation of Nurse Ratched who is known to be the best nurse at the institution. McMurphy and the other patients ban together to rebel against the nurse and the institution, but end up failing miserably. This film relates to the history of abnormal psychology because the setting takes place in a mental institution, none of which currently exist. In the mental institution, workers were allowed to restrain the inmates and physically abuse them, which would never be allowed today. The nurses in the mental institution would have the inmates line up and would administer their medication through a window - they would even administer medication to patients who had yet to be diagnosed with a mental illness. …show more content…

Some of these behaviors include: aimlessly dancing, constant repetition, selective mutism, aggression and emotional outbursts. For example, Cheswick was an inmate who had multiple emotional outbursts throughout the film, typically occurring during group therapy sessions. One of his outbursts occurred when he asked Nurse Ratched why she had to ration his cigarettes. He was not fond of her answer and began screaming in an emotional rage. However, one extreme case is Billy, a boy with a stuttering problem and very poor social skills. When he would get angry or frustrated, he would go over the top and begin hitting himself. As a result of defiance against Nurse Ratched and an event that occurred after an illegal party that was thrown at the institution one night, Billy ended up committed suicide by slicing his

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