One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest Figurative Language Essay

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Ken Kesey incorporates figurative language into his novel, One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest, to illustrate the struggle to overcome the comfort of inaction, that ultimately results in the great benefit of standing up for one’s self. When McMurphy decides to stand up to Nurse Ratched, there is “no fog” (130). Kesey’s metaphor of the fog represents the haze of inaction that hovers over the patients of the ward. With the oppressive Nurse Ratched in charge, the patients are not able to stand up for themselves and are forced to be “sly” to avoid her vicious punishments (166). When the patients avoid confrontation with the Nurse, they are guaranteed safety by hiding in the fog, complaisant with their standing. The fog obscures the patient’s view of the ward and the farther they slip into it, the farther away they drift from reality. …show more content…

McMurphy leads the patients to face their problems head on. Instead of hiding in the “thick fog”, the patients are able to expose and deal with their problems (119). The ward members start to bring up new ideas in the group meetings, defying Nurse Ratched’s overbearing ways. But despite McMurphy’s initial gusto towards defiance in the beginning of the novel, he finds that Nurse Ratched “controls” all facets of the Combine”, including the release dates of committed patients and is disheartened in his cause (156, 140). With the use of the metaphor of a combine to represent the ward, Kesey illustrates the effect it has on the patients. A combine harvests grain crops. It reaps, threshes, and winnows the crops, leaving behind the dried stems and leaves containing limited nutrients. This is the same method that Nurse Ratched uses on the

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