One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest Themes

1277 Words3 Pages

The book set in Oregon, a staunch liberal state, during some time during the 1950s and 60s, leaves the book written during a time where social change and political unrest plagued the country. One Flew over the Cuckoo’s nest shows many themes through the Novel as readers go through. One of the Themes, Limitations of Authority vs. an Omniscient Power which can translate to plainly, Democracy vs. Dictatorship is found throughout the book as characters rebell against a dictatorship of sort. This theme is criticized by many readers as it shows through pure fiction, a new light on the world. Ken Kesey uses Over the Cuckoo’s Nest to show readers elaborate details and shocking allusions to show a symbolic representation of how dictatorship fails and democracy rises. Through characters such as McMurphy and Bromden, the main characters in the novel and debatably either could be the protagonist, Ken Kesey shows that the victims of ward can rise up against a secular power, which is perceived as “the combine” but is also personified as Nurse Ratched,regardless of how helpless they may look.
Ken Kesey uses …show more content…

Regardless of the fact the ward patients can leave anytime, they choose not to become they are under the helm of the Nurse and the combine, their minds are twisted into believes that they have to stay, McMurphy’s narcissistic ego empowers them to become individuals again, which leads in most becoming free again, no longer under control of the system. Although most of the patients become free, Cheswick and Billy are killed because of McMurphy’s actions, which leads to the argument of whether McMurphy is a hero or not. This may not be clear, but what is clear that the limiting the authority of the Big Nurse proves to be for the best because the patients now have actual lives that they can return to rather than being part of a system under an omniscient

Open Document