One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest We, being members of society do not have the authority to judge whether people are sane or insane. Some may say that others are insane but we are all a little bit crazy. One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, a novel written by Ken Kesey deals with these topics and is a well-written piece of literature that will be enjoyed by generations to come. It will become a timeless classic simply because of the great combination of the setting and the characters and how they both support the themes found throughout the story. The setting of One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest is a backdrop which makes it easy to see the wickedness of the world and people in general. The hospital, Dr. Spivey says, “is a little world inside that is a made-to-scale prototype of the big world outside.” Most of the action in the novel takes place in a world that is indeed limited and specific. It is but one ward of one hospital in Oregon. The world of the C!uckoo’s Nest is in many ways a cartoon world that is filled with colorful characters and laughs, in which good and evil are clearly defined. Far from being a place of healing, the hospital is a place of fear wher
Above all, this sanity consists of the ability to laugh, to laugh both at your self and at the world that is often ludicrous and cruel. e patients do not laugh and fear the consequences of anything they speak of. The Chief has always possessed his own reserves of courage; it just took McMurphy to remind him that he did. ” As McMurphy is strapped to the treatment table (shape of a cross), a parallel is drawn between him and Christ, both sacrificed themselves for the good of! others. However, as grim as his descriptions of the hospital may be, Kesey is not simply writing a book that criticizes such mental health facilities, for we realize that the outside world! is not much better. The setting of this novel allows the characters to develop freely and they are even a little off the wall which is a good attribute that will be admired by future readers. That was, we do not pay enough attention to our sexuality. She is the voice of common sense but McMurphy never lets rules or common sense stand in the way of good fun. Where sane men and women are not afraid of sex, many of the patients are in the hospital at least in part because their sexuality has been devastated. ------------------------------------------------------------------------**Bibliography**. The Chief’s return to sanity is si!gnaled in part by an erection. The Nurse and her new patient (McMurphy) are in every way opposed to each other; she demands control, while he seeks freedom. A quite disturbing piece, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, makes you think about how people in such institutions live. The biggest being: What is craziness and what is sanity. He sees his father “shrink” in his mind, the diminishing is a literal and physical one, from a proud Indian Chief to a man stripped of his name.
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