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Ken Kesey's One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest and Anthony Burgess's A Clockwork Orange

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When African slaves were sold to Americans, they lost their fundamental rights as human beings. However, their inferiority was further cemented when slaves eventually conformed to their white owners. In slavery’s infancy, almost all slaves resisted against their oppressors in one form or another but had limited to no success. These failed resistances eventually led to hopelessness for the slaves as they even began to consider slavery as an accepted practice. Many slaves developed a notion of performing their forced labour more willingly and in turn their owners decreased the beatings and cruelty towards them (“Slavery in the United States.”) For instance, slaves who displayed respect towards their owners were assigned to perform less …show more content…

An important difference between the books, however, lies in the regimes’ method of oppression. Ms.Ratched’s reign is rooted in stability because she commands her ward with an iron fist and does not allow any opportunity for an uprising. To compare, in Alex’s society, there is a lack of regulations enforced by the corrupt government’s hired police, which cause the citizens to question the validity of their administration.

Both Nurse Ratched and the totalitarian government in A Clockwork Orange utilize technology, in the form inhibiting the brain from functioning on free will, to preserve their own power. To begin, Nurse Ratched, in One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, employs electroshock therapy on those who challenge her authority over the hospital. When Randle McMurphy confesses his weakness towards the nurse’s electroshock therapy, Chief relates this struggle to his father’s battle with alcohol: “‘My father was real big. Every time he put the bottle to his mouth, he don’t suck out of it, it sucks out of him … I’m not saying they killed him. They just worked on him, the way they’re working on you.’” (Kesey 189) In other words, Chief uses the symbol of alcohol to warn McMurphy that, similar to alcoholics after drinking, patients of shock therapy only appear jolly

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