One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest Power

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“Power comes from temperament but enthusiasm kills the switch”. One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest by Ken kesey reveals how the struggle for power and authority is shown in the psychiatric hospital. Ken kesey expresses this mastery through Nurse Ratched and McMurphy and their effect on the patients in the ward. Nurse Ratched has all the power due to her technically being in charge of the ward. The patients “men” are powerless with their acceptance and obedience to her actions. However, everything changes when McMurphy arrives. His confidence and charisma give him some type of power that challenges and disrupts the Nurse’s drunkening thirst for power. Power in this novel is lost, gained and repossessed. Throughout the novel, women tend to be in control. “We are victims of a matriarchy here, my friend” Harding said. Harding tells McMurphy how the doctor is as helpless against anything as they are. He cannot fire or hire people or decide who gets to leave or stay. That decision is for the supervisor and she’s a woman, a good friend of Nurse Ratched, making the Big Nurse do anything she wants with them without the fear of losing her job. She uses rules she calls ‘ward policy’ to keep the patients in check. From listening to the same loud music …show more content…

“... McMurphy rips her uniform off, exposing her ample bosom..”. By revealing her womanhood, all the men know that she has a weakness. They won’t ever forget seeing her breasts. She tries to cover things up by taking McMurphy away to be given a lobotomy but she no longer has control over the patients regardless. At some point in the novel, McMurphy describes how men can gain power through sex whereas women lose it. By concealing her feminine nature, she was able to have power over the patients. Now that her womanliness has been exposed, her manner of leverage and authority reduces. Power is confidentially linked with gender in One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s

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