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One Flew Over The Cuckoos Nest

Submitted by caramelvix3n on December 3, 2005

Category: English
Words: 1339 | Pages: 6
Views: 161
Popularity Rank: 84,672
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. Kesey lived in a time of social upheaval. He was in fact one of the leaders in a movement that challenged the social, political, and legal systems of his youth, and was known at the time as a youth's revolution. "McMurphy's antics may also be seen as an allegory for the time in which the novel was written." exhibiting the rebellious and challenging nature of the youth in their resistance to the conformity of society. (Moss and Wilson, 292)

"The combine" is a phrase coined by the ‘mute' Chief Bromden that lends a malicious intent to the invisible pressure of society that to him is physically crushing people into submission. In this night he knows that they come and install machinery in people's heads that controls them, making them conform. Those people then move on and install the same machinery in the heads of their neighbors, and the combine's influence spreads. This is his realization that no matter how strong an individual may be, slowly everyone will be conformed; the press of society cannot be escaped. Nowhere is this more apparent that in the backwaters of society where the resilient non-conformists remain; in the mental institutions, the domain of Nurse Ratched.

Those in the asylum are those that the combine could not assimilate as easily – those that refused to conform to the rules laid form by the civil, judicial, and sociological systems of, as Jim Kamp put it in his Reference Guide to American Literature, "…[their] conformist postwar American society shaped by materialistic consumer values."1 This non-conformity is displayed most logically in a series of memories that Bromden relates, in particular his father's refusal to sell his tribe's land to business men because he valued the beauty of the waterfalls and the simplicity of his life. These values were foreign to the ‘white man', who could not comprehend his reason. This is Bromden's introduction to the bizarre expectations of society, and it is also an insight...

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