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One Flew Over The Cuckoo 's Nest By Ken Kesey

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The book titled, “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” written by Ken Kesey is what I chose to read and evaluate. Before I go any further, it is important to share some of Kesey’s background in order to better understand why he wrote this book. After receiving his bachelor’s degree, Kesey ended up at Stanford University in a creative writing program. During his time at Stanford, he volunteered himself to be in an experimental drug program where he was used to test the different effects of the drugs at the Local Veterans Administration Hospital. This was where he began to experiment with LSD. During his experimental time, He ended up taking a job as an orderly in the local mental institution where he got to observe as well as speak to the …show more content…

By the end of the book, many of the patients have not only developed their own voices, but many of whom were in the hospital voluntarily gain back their independence and leave the hospital for good. By standing up for themselves and leaving, Nurse Ratched’s authoritarianism has been overthrown and she is left with a limited amount of power. The narrating character is Chief Bromden. He is a tall Native American and the orderlies have given him the nickname “Chief Broom” according to Kesey (1962) on page three in the text because they force him to sweep the halls on a daily basis. Chief Bromden has been in the Institution for ten years. According to Kesey (1962), both the patients and staff refer to him as “deaf and dumb” because he hasn’t spoken a word, therefore they assume he is deaf. Kesey describes how the Chief is treated by the orderlies in this statement, “The least black boy and one of the bigger ones catch me before I get ten steps out of the mop closet, and drag me back to the shaving room. I don’t fight or make any noise” (1962, p. 6). However, unbeknownst to anyone, the Chief can hear and speak, but between being heavily medicated and bullied as the time, he is left feeling fearful as well as unsteady. He thinks that if he remains silent, then no one will bother him and he can just hide in the shadows where he will not be in the spotlight. Right in the beginning of the book, as Nurse Ratched enters the ward,

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