Sunday, March 17, 2019
McMurphy, Rebel with a Cause in Ken Keseys One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest :: One Flew Over Cuckoos Nest
McMurphy, Rebel with a Cause in unrivaled Flew Over The Cuckoos inhabit   Ken Keseys experiences in a work forcetal entry urged him to tell the story of such a ward. We argon told this story by dint of the eyes of a huge red Indian who every champion believes to be deafen and dumb named Chief in his novel One Flew Over The Cuckoos Nest. Chief is a patient of in an Oregon psychiatric hospital on the ward of Mrs Ratched. she is the symbol of authority throughout the text. This ward forms the backdrop for the rest of the story. The men on the ward are resigned to their regime compulsive by this tyrant who is referred to as the Big Nurse, until McMurphy arrives to disrupt it. He makes the men realise that it is possible to think for themselves, which results in a complete last of the system as it was. Randle P. McMurphy, a wrongly committed mental patient with a lust for life. The qualities that garner McMurphy respect and admiration from his fellow patients ar e also responsible for his tragic downfall. These qualities include his temper, which leads to his beingness deemed disturbed, his stubbornness, which results in his receiving many painful disciplinary treatments, and finally his free spirit, which leads to his death. Despite McMurphy being a noble man, in the end, these characteristics hurt him more than they help him. He forms the terms to my study of rebellion.   The Narrator, Chief Bromden comments that it was not he who originally decided to pick out the act of being deaf and dumb but others who treated him as if he were deaf and dumb, which illustrates that the way a person is depends upon the society just about him. Indeed, Chief Bromdens father told him   If you dont watch it people will force you one way or the other into doing what they think you should do, or into just being mule-stubborn and doing the opposite just out of spite.   This is very much emphasised in the book Kesey strongly sugge sts that the residents of the ward in his novel are there because they could not cope with the pressures put on them by society to conform, and that their monomania is caused by others, rather than originating within the men themselves.
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