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One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest Essay

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Ken Kesey’s novel, One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest, tells a fictionalized tale regarding a mental asylum in the 1960s. By analyzing the novel, we can see that Kesey argues that games are the ideal and natural manner in which homosocial communities and friendships are created, which ultimately benefit men by allowing them to resolve their issues surrounding masculinity; Kesey argues that games are the antithesis to the authority observed in society and institutions which aim to control men within rules and standards. Homosocial communities are depicted by Kesey to be absent and actively discouraged in the institutions people belong to. Men in institutions such as a mental asylum are depicted to lack friendships with other patients, as they are limited in the interactions they have with one another. We can see that the mental patients prior to McMurphy …show more content…

Nurse Ratched primarily initiates the surveillance in the ward, through surveillance she notes the change experienced in the men and the friendships that formed among them. The friendships are factors that when considered in the ward, makes it more difficult to maintain order. Through friendships, men are allowed freedoms such as: getting “together enough guys for a basketball team, [bringing] a ball back from the gym to get the team used to handling it” (175), actions that go against the rules and authority set in place by the institutions. Surveillance becomes a viable tactic towards reinstating order, as it creates distrust amongst the men, which weakens friendships due to the increasing paranoia of possible punishment. It can then be seen that Kesey argues that distrust clashes with the freedoms possible in the friendships formed, and that these friendships aim to reduce the distrust experienced as much as

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