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    Ken Kesey’s One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest reveals the underbelly of the abhorrent prison system that was a home to mental patients in the mid nineteen-hundreds. The story is narrated by a patient named Bromden, and takes place in a mental institution run by the iron hand of Nurse Ratched. Patients in the hospital are subject to horrendous tortures for even the smallest deviations in expectation, and are denied any source of happiness in their lives. However, the dreadful routine is shaken up when

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    A Crazy, Normal Perspective of: One Who Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest In One Who Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest by Ken Kesey, the concept of insanity is proven as a state consipred by society, but is represented as an illness that one individual grants on another. Kesey’s writes his novel through the mind of Chief Bromden, a patient in a mental hospital, who becomes inspired to rebel against the ward by a character named McMurphy. Through characters like McMurphy and Chief Bromden, Kesey shows that the

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    While reading a novel, the main characters of the story are often the ones that stick out the most. In One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, author Ken Kesey highlights the thinking of people in the late 1950s and early 1960s through the characters he creates. Nurse Ratched, the controller and boss of the ward, symbolizes the different beliefs of women that circulated society at this time. During this time, women were joining the workforce but had to deal with getting paid less than men and losing their

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    The film One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest demonstrates the struggle between conformity and individuality. Mac McMurphy the main character represents individuality and rebellion against authoritative control. He does not let Nurse Ratchet control him and tries to convince the other patients in the ward to stand up for themselves and not let her push them around. He tries to show them that they are men not children and that Nurse Ratchet is not the boss of them. He helps them rediscover their manly

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    590 One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest Reading Journal 2 Although Nurse Ratched’s guidelines and procedures have the ability of putting all of the members of the ward into a “fog,” a state of mind numbing acquiescence, this has not occurred since McMurphy has arrived. In fact, McMpurphy makes it his mission to break Nurse Ratched once and for all after witnessing her manipulation of his colleagues during a group therapy session. He comes to the final conclusion that Ratched a “ball buster, and even

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    In One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Chief Bromden is in a psychiatric ward which is ran by Nurse Ratched. Bromden also calls Nurse Ratched, Big Nurse. He is part Indian. He pretends to be deaf and dumb so he does not have to work. Due to pretending to be deaf, he hears everything that he is not suppose to hear. Nurse Ratched orders the black men in the ward to shave Bromden, which he hates. They give him medicine that makes him go to sleep so he will stop fighting the fact that he has to be shaved

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    where they have similar styles or looks. One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, a children's literature drama by Ken Kesey expresses his criticism of society by telling the story of what went on in the hospital ward. The patients in the ward have this problem, the idea of reaching these standards is forced upon them. Nurse Ratched uses intimidation and weaknesses to ensure the patients will give up their will to rebel against the injustices. In One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Ken Kesey uses symbolism and

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    one or the other; You are good or you are bad, mean or nice. Then there are the sane and the insane. What decides whether a person’s actions are considered one or the other, depends on who is viewing them. In the circumstances of the novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest by Ken Kesey, there is the argument between who is insane and who is considered sane between the Big Nurse and McMurphy especially. She sees him as insane because of his behavior and the way he knows how to get under her skin. He

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    Although Big Nurse turns McMurphy to a vegetable at the end of Ken Kesey’s novel, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Kesey’s portrayal of McMurphy as a God-like symbol in the lives of the men on the ward helps criticize the diagnosing of “crazy” people in the mid 1900s. Specifically, Big Nurse subjects McMurphy and Chief Bromden to shock therapy after a fight with the black men who were cleansing the men. As they enter the chamber, McMurphy stops Bromden: “Take ‘er easy. I’ll go first” (237). McMurphy

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    Ken Kesey’s novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest is a comedy about a group of men who live in a mental institution during the 60s. The main character, Bromden, suffers from schizophrenia and makes a friend with the new patient, McMurphy. McMurphy is the novel’s protagonist who challenges everything that the ward stands for and tries to help the other patients in gaining back their sanity and having a good time. McMurphy makes a large impact on all of the other patients in the ward, teaching them

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