One Flew Over the Cukoo's Nest by Ken Kesey
Is the tale of the
struggle between the free spirit Randal McMurphy and the authoritarian
Big Nurse, told from the perspective of one of the acquitted, the Chief.
McMurphy finds himself immediate at odds against the Big Nurse as his
mere presence in the ward promotes change and incites reckless behavior
in the ward attendees. In other words, he creates discourse in the Big
Nurses otherwise smooth, carefully orchestrated production of a ward. He
is ultimately what could be considered by some to be martyred in the
attempts to liberate his friends from the firm grasp of the Big Nurse
and in the end his friends are indeed capable of sticking up for
themselves and what they think is right through the inspiration of their
fearless leader's civil and at times not so civil disobedience.
It's too facile to place a theme of good vs evil on Kesey's work, as
the struggle between McMurphy and the Big Nurse can be uses the
symbolize a multitude of things: man vs woman (Kesey's writing does seem
to reflect machismo, sometimes even chauvinistic behavior), the
oppression of an easily manipulated masses. The struggle between an
authoritative figure and the resistor has almost endless applications
symbolically.
Kesey uses the Chief to almost be a metaphoric measurement of the
effect of McMurphy's presence in the ward. Accordingly, as the novel
progresses the tone of which the narrator speaks grows from solemn and
almost hopeless, to ever increasingly more confident, defiant and
noticeable cheerful.
"While McMurphy laughs. Rocking farther and farther backward against the
cabin top, spreading his laugh out across the water—laughing at the
girl, the guys, at George, at me sucking my bleeding thumb, at the
captain back at the pier and the bicycle rider and the service-station
guys and the five thousand houses and the Big Nurse and all of it.
Because he knows you have to laugh at the things that hurt you just to
keep yourself in balance, just to keep the world from running you plumb
crazy."
Kesey makes use of several motifs in Cukoo's Nest, one in particular
being the fog in which the Chief often would hide in. The fog itself,
which I believe never actually existed, it was only referenced to by the
Chief alone and I believe to be a side effect of the fact that he is
mentally "not all there", is a symbol for the control held by the Big
Nurse and the Combine (also fairly certain didnt exist). The fog which
in the beginning was a regular presence was something that rendered him
utterly helpless, however through the persistent presence of McMurphy,
the fog ceased to appear. Kesey also makes use of foreshadowing in that the many reference to
lobotomy in the beginning of the story foreshadowed the ultimate fate of
McMurphy.
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