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Gender Roles In One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest

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Feminist The gender roles are switched in this novel, with the women as the head of the hospital who are very strong and powerful while the men are the disabled, weaker ones who need the help of the women. Nurse Ratched, the head nurse runs the entire hospital and everyone is beneath her, which is a representation of the beginning of the women’s equality movement that occurred during this time period. The patients view the head nurse as a “ball-cutter” who symbolizes castration. With a woman as the head nurse, the male patients are stripped of their manhood and are excluded from their sexual desires. As Bromden remarked after a former patient committed suicide by cutting off his testicles that “all he had to do was wait” (Kesey, 1962, p. 129) …show more content…

She forces the patients to complete household chores such as cleaning the hallways and the bathrooms, chores that a woman would typically complete in a male dominated society. When McMurphy arrives to the ward, he immediately tries to take Nurse Ratched’s power away from her by defying all of her rules and leading the other patients to go against her as well. Bromden states, “The big nurse tests a needle against her fingertip. I’m afraid—she stabs the needle down in the rubber-capped vial and lifts the plunger—that is exactly what the new patient is planning: to take over.” (Kesey, 1962, p. 27), symbolizing that even in a female dominated ward, a male should still be the head of the ward. However, even when McMurphy believes that he has power over Nurse Ratched, he backs down when he realizes that she has the final say about whether he stays in the ward or is able to go …show more content…

The moment McMurphy attacks Nurse Ratched is the moment she loses all her power and the patients no longer fear her anymore. When she returns to the ward after her attack, Bromden remarks “…in spite of its being smaller and tighter and more starched than her old uniforms, it could no longer conceal the fact that she was a woman” (Kesey, 1962, p. 320) symbolizing that Nurse Ratched’s exposure to the male patients ultimately destroyed her strength and deemed her to nothing more than a simple woman. When she tries to resume her role as the dominating head nurse, most of the patients have either checked out of the institution or moved to a different ward. She no longer had the power she used to have in order to control her ward, and by the end of the novel, Chief Bromden manages to gain the courage to finally escape the

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