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    One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest revolves around the theme of individual freedom versus social conformity. Ken Kesey uses symbolism and motifs to represent this issue; the Combine symbolizes a society that aims to produce obedient servants and sends those who don’t easily fit into society to be “fixed” at the hospital. Patrick McMurphy’s conflict with Nurse Ratched epitomizes the rebellion against social conformity. McMurphy serves as the anti-hero who struggles with serving both his…

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    Ken Kesey’s, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, indulges in the escape from society’s boundaries through natural human expression while acknowledging the freedom this independence creates. While people build up walls (seen quite literally in acknowledgement to the ward), The ability to express human nature is present in McMurphy’s character as masculinity and virility become a gateway to freedom in the ward. Randle McMurphy, a character noted for his edge and independence, makes an entrance that…

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    Manipulation is a great way to make sure that control is maintained over a period of time. This is evident in One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, when Nurse Ratched and Randle McMurphy battle for power. Ken Kesey, the author of the novel, worked in a psychiatric ward during the 1960’s. These experiences affected him and led to him writing this novel. The events that happened in the novel can be related to how Hitler maintained power throughout the same decade that the novel was written. Hitler…

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    (INSERT CATCHY THING) Ken Kesey wrote One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest in 1962. The novel presented many hippie, counter culture ideas, such as society’s negative toll on an individual’s psyche, and that sanity and madness is more of a matter of who is and isn’t adjusted to society (Shechner, 2002). The novel also explores the deplorable conditions and treatments mental patients are subjected to, from electroshock therapy to lobotomies to physical and mental abuse, all from the perspective of a…

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    The movie, ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s nest’, is about a man named McMurphy, who is a criminal who has to be in jail, but is now moved to a mental institution because he himself acted mentally ill. He thinks that if he acts like that he does not have to be in jail, but can live freely in the metal institution. The Doctors want to evaluate him while he is there. A nurse in the ward, named Ratched, is in charge of the ward where McMurphy is in. He does not like nurse Ratched because he thinks…

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    Though it may seem that Randle McMurphy is alway the suave, collected, swindling man that he came into the ward as, it is evident throughout the book that Mr. McMurphy gradually changes into a man who cares about the well being of others by the end of the book. McMurphy entered the ward as a “‘gambling fool’” who’ll “‘trim [the other patients of the ward] like little lambs’” (Kesey 12). He’s a tough arrogant man who has no remorse for robbing the patients of their money and eventually cigarettes…

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    The novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest by Ken Kesey follows the protagonist, Chief Bromden, throughout his time within a mental institution. He is a Chronic in the mental institution because they are deemed incurable and will most likely remain in the ward forever. Within the subdivisions of the Chronics Chief Bromdem is a walker due to the fact that he is capable of movement. Kesey uses these first few pages of the novel in order to provide a sense of characterization for Chief Bromden. His…

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    One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest Psychiatric wards and facilities in America were notorious for cases of mistreatment and wrongdoing. As a result, they are often portrayed in media and literature, one such example of this is One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. The novel follows the story of Chief Bromden and Randle McMurphy who are confined to a Psych Ward maintained by an awful and abusive nurse who controls every aspect of life in the facility. The main themes of the novel are challenging…

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    One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest and Dead Poet’s Society | Comparative Essay There are many similarities between One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest by Ken Kesey and Dead Poet’s Society by Peter Weir, as both texts strive to deliver the message of independence. Characterisation between the texts showed the power of authority and the weakness in the majority by way of different methods to keep strays in check. Additionally, there are many symbolic meanings that reference freedom, domestication and…

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    Grace Clinton Ms. Hattan Honors World Literature 10 February 2017 One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest Log 1 1/15/17 Preface, Page 1 “One flew east, one flew west, one flew over the cuckoo’s nest” This is the opening statement of the book. It is also a classic children’s nursery rhyme, which intrigued me and is an allusion to the child-like state that the mental patients are in. As I kept reading, this quote made more sense. This quote is an example of foreshadowing as it gives information…

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