Sunday, December 7, 2014

One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest Final Project

Kaitlin Kan 
F Block Introduction to Literature 
Mr. Dilworth 
12/08/14


Final Project

Chief Bromden 
  1. “Sometimes I got lost in it [the fog] anyway, got in too deep, trying to hide, and every time I did, it seemed like I always turned up at the same place. (Kesey, page 131)”
  2. “I slid from between the sheets and walked barefoot across the cold tile between the beds. I felt the tile with my feet and wondered how many times, how many thousand times, had I run a mop over this same tile floor and never felt it at all. That mopping seemed like a dream to me, like I couldn’t exactly believe all those years of it had really happened. Only that cold linoleum under my feet was real right then, only that moment. (Kesey, page 163)”
  3. “And I’m just about to go and tell them, how, if they’ll come on in, I’ll go get Papa from the scaffolds on the falls, when I see that they don’t look like they’d heard me talk at all. They aren’t even looking at me. The fat man is swinging back and forth, looking off down the ridge of lava to where the men are standing their places on the scaffolding in the falls, just plaid-shirted shapes in the mist from this distance. Every so often you can see somebody shoot out an arm and take a step forward like a sword-fighter, and then hold up his fifteen-foot forked spear for somebody on the scaffold above him to pull off the flopping salmon. The fat gut watched the men standing in their places in the fifty-foot veil of water, and bats his eyes and grunts every time one of the them makes a lunge for a salmon. The other two, John and the woman, are just standing. Not a one of the three acts like they heard a thing I said; in fact they’re all looking off from me like they’d as soon I wasn’t there. (Kesey, page 213)”
  4. “The Combine. It worked on him for years. He was big enough to fight it for a while. It wanted us to live in inspected houses. It wanted to take the falls. It was even in the tribe, and they worked on him. In the town they beat him up in the alleys and cut his hair short once. Oh, the Combine’s big- big. He fought it a long time till my mother made him too little to fight anymore and he gave up…..That’s what they said to him. He said, What can you pay for the way a man lives? He said, What can you pay for what a man is? They didn’t understand. Not even the tribe. They stood out in the front of our door all holding those checks and they wanted him to tell the what to do now. They kept asking him to invest for them, or tell them where to go, or to buy a farm. But he was too little anymore. And he was too drunk, too. The Combine had whipped him. It beats everybody. It’ll beat everybody. It’ll beat you too. They can’t have somebody as big as Papa running around unless he’s one of them. (Kesey, page 220-221)”
  5. “I took a deep breath and bent over and took the levers. I heaved my legs under me and felt the grind of weight at my feet. I heaved again and heard the wires and connections tearing out of the floor. I lurched it up to my knees and was able to get an arm around it and my other hand under it. The chrome was cold against my neck and the side of my hea. I put my back toward the screen, then spun and let the momentum carry the panel through the screen and window with a ripping crash. The glass splashed out in the mood, like a bright cold water baptizing the sleeping earth. Panting, I thought for a second about going back and getting Scanlon and some of the others, but then I heard the running squeak of the black boys’ shoes in the hall and I put my hand on the sill and vaulted after the panel, into the moonlight.      
These quotes of Chief Bromden show both a steady progression of his character and an element of understanding of the Combine that he provides to the story as the narrator. They show the origination of his mental weakness, his loss of strength and submission to the Combine, and finally, his regaining of strength sparked by the arrival of McMurphy. He introduces us to the entity of the Combine, and is noted for his insightful depth on the subject that he provides the reader.

Chief Bromden, narrator of One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, lends his insightful recount of the great revolution that took place in the ward upon R. P. McMurphy’s admission. He is an important character on each allegorical tier of the story, despite being a self-proclaimed unreliable narrator. In the plot that simply consists of men of the ward battling against the iron-fisted Nurse Ratched, he is the unreliable narrator that gives his personal account of the events of the plot. He also presents his personal observations and insights into the work of the Combine in the allegorical tier that symbolizes Individuality overcoming Conformity. Finally, on the tier of this story that mirrors the Gospels, Chief Bromden plays the role of Peter, the Apostle that was the “Rock” of Jesus’ Church.
Chief Bromden also presents a subplot, which is his own personal progression that was sparked by the Admission of McMurphy. Pretending to be deaf and mute because of his severe lack of confidence and fear of the Combine, he documents his own personal growth. Formerly concealed by “fog” (a method of hiding oneself from the challenges presented from the Combine), he tells how the presence of McMurphy has giving him confidence, allowing him emerge from the fog that hid him in order to face the challenges of life. When McMurphy is rallying men to stand up to Nurse Ratched by voting to watch the World Series during work hours, Chief speaks of how McMurphy compelled him to rise out of the fog: “Just by the way the nurse is staring at me with her mouth empty of words I can see I’m in for trouble, but I can’t stop it. McMurphy’s got hidden wires hooked to it, lifting it slow just to get me out of the fog and into the open where I’m fair game. He’s doing it, wires… No. That’ not the truth. I lifted it myself. (Kesey, page 142)”  Physical size is also associated with one’s confidence in this book, and Bromden also documents how McMurphy allowed him to “physically” grow, giving him the strength and the ability to throw a control panel out the window, a feat formerly thought to be impossible.  The book concludes with Bromden planning to return to his homeland.
An image that reflect's Chief Bromden's heritage, a reoccurring motif throughout the novel.


Randle Patrick McMurphy 

  1. “The Big Nurse’s eyes swelled out white as he got close. She hadn’t reckoned on him doing anything. This was supposed to be her final victory over him, supposed to establish her rule once and for all. But here he comes and he’s big as a house! She started popping her mouth and looking for her black boys, scared to death, but he stopped before he got to her. He stopped in front of her window and he said in his slowest, deepest drawl how he figured he could use one of  the smokes he bought this mornin’, then ran his hand through the glass. (Kesey, page 201)”  
  2. “As McMurphy led the twelve of us toward the ocean. (Kesey, page 239)”
  3. The ward seemed awful quiet after Disturbed. I walked to our day room and for some reason stopped at the door; everybody’s face turned  up to me with  different look than they’d ever given me before. Their faces lighted up as if they were looking into the glare of a sideshow platform. ‘Here, in fronta your very eyes,’ Harding spiels, ‘is the Wildman who broke the arm…of the black boy! Hey-ha lookee, lookee.’ I grinned back at them, realizing how McMurphy must’ve felt these months with these faces screaming up at him. (Kesey, page 290)”
  4. “But this morning I have to sit in the chair and only listen to them bring him in. Still, even though I can’t see him, I know he’s no ordinary Admission. I don’t hear him slide scared along the wall, and when they tell him about the shower he don’t just submit with a weak little yes, he tells them right back in a loud, brassy voice that he’s already plenty damn clean, thank you. (Kesey, page 11)”
  5. “‘No, he isn’t extraordinary. He is simply a man and no more, and is subject to all the fears and all the cowardice and all the timidity that any other man is subject to. Given a few more days, I have a very strong feeling that he will prove this, to us as well as the rest of the patients. If we keep him on the ward I am certain his brashness will subside, his self-made rebellion will dwindle to nothing, and’- she smiles, knowing something nobody else does- ‘that our redheaded hero will cut himself down to something patients will all recognize and lose respect for: a braggart and a blowhard of the type who they climb up on a soapbox and shout for a following, the way we’ve all seen Mr. Cheswick do, then back down the moment there is any real danger to him personally.’ (Kesey, page 157)”
These quotes illustrate the consistent role of McMurphy in the many layers of the plot. He is depicted as a savior of the men and warrior against authority and the Combine, while still a mere mortal. Noted for his fearlessness and strong will, he throws himself into the his battle against authority to be a hero and savior of the other men in the ward, despite its immense risk and difficulty.


R. P. McMurphy plays a crucial role in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, as he is the protagonist in each allegorical tier that is presented within the book. In the fight against Nurse Ratched, he serves as the impetus for their revolution they hold against her. For example, he begins by making a bet with the men in the ward, saying that he could get the best of the nurse in one week's time: "...Any of you sharpies here willing to take my five bucks that says that I can get the best of that woman [Nurse Ratched] -before the week's up- without her getting the best of me? One week, and if I don't have her to where she don't know whether to shit or go blind, the bet is yours. (Kesey, page 73)" In the fight against the Combine, or the entity that strives to destroy all imperfect that is not compatible with the specific mold of society, McMurphy represents the power of individuality, and how it defies conformity. Even at the beginning of the book, he shows that he defies authority upon his very admission to the ward. Chief Bromden says on McMurphy's arrival: "But this morning I have to sit in the chair and only listen to them bring him in. Still, even though I can't see him, I know he's no ordinary Admission. I don't hear him slide scared along the wall, and when they tell him about the shower he don't just submit with a weak little yes he tells them right back in a loud, brassy voice that he's already plenty damn clean, thank you. (Kesey, page 11)" Finally, McMurphy mirrors the Gospels as Jesus Christ, Himself. There are a number of parables that are direct links to the story of Jesus' crucifixion. Bromden observes on their fishing trip: "As McMurphy led the twelve of us toward the ocean. (Kesey, page 239)" This is can loosely be associated with Luke 5:1-11, which tells of Jesus’ Miraculous Catch of Fish with the apostles.
McMurphy defies conformity by rallying his fellow patients together, giving them confidence. Throughout the book, the reader sees a progression of the patients from meek "rabbits" that submit to the will of Nurse Ratched, to men who have gained enough confidence to think and act for themselves. He does this with the greater good in mind, as (consistent with the Gospels) standing up to such a powerful entity is difficult and exhausting for McMurphy. An example of this is when he stands up to the nurse one final time at the end of his life. Narrates Bromden, " ...nurses prying those heavy red fingers out of the white flesh of her throat as it they were her neck bones, jerking him backward off of her with a loud heave of breath, only then did he show any sign that he might be anything other than a sane, willful, dogged man performing a hard duty that finally just had to be done, like it or not. (Kesey, page 319)" This signifies that what he does is not easy, but standing up for his individuality is worth risking himself. 

  

Nurse Ratched 
  1. “She’s carrying her woven wicker bag like the ones the Umpqua tribe sells out along the hot August highway, a bag shape of a toolbox with a hemp handle. She’s had it all the years I been here. It’s a loose weave and I can see inside it; there's no compact or lipstick or a woman stuff, she’s got that bag full of a thousand parts she aims to use in her duties today- wheels and gears, cogs polished to a hard glitter, tiny pills that gleam like porcelain, needles, forceps, watchmakers’ pliers, rolls of copper wire…(Kesey, page 4)”
  2. “I guess if she can’t cut below the belt she’ll do it above the eyes. (Kesey, page 191)”
  3. “McMurphy doesn’t know it, but he’s onto what I realized a long time back, that it’s not just the Big Nurse by herself, but it’s the who Combine, the nationwide Combine that’s the really big force, and the nurse is just a high-ranking official for them. (Kesey, page 192)”
  4. “‘What worries me, Billy,’ she said- I could hear the change in her voice- “is how your poor mother is going to take this.’ She got the response she was after. Billy flinched and put his hand to his cheek like he’d been burned with acid. ‘Mrs. Bibbit’s always been so proud of your discretion. I know she has. This is going to disturb her terribly. You know how she is when she gets disturbed, Billy; you know how ill the poor woman can become. She’s very sensitive. Especially concerning her son. She always spoke so proudly of you. She al-’ ‘Nuh! Nuh!’ His mouth was working. He shook his head, begging her. ‘You d-don’t n-n-need!’ (Kesey, page 314-315)”
  5. “Her face was bloated blue and out of shape on one side, closing one eye completely, and she had a heavy bandage around her throat. And a new white uniform. Some of the guys grinned at the front of it; in spite of its being smaller and tighter and more starched than her old uniforms, it could no longer conceal the fact that she was a woman. (Kesey, page 320)”

These quotes help establish the role of Nurse Ratched throughout One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, as well as depict her decline of power at the hand of McMurphy. By using masculinity and femininity as an indication of power, her degression of power is documented. Also depicted is her power against the men, in terms of her ability to bully them and even physiologically destroy their personalities. Finally, her higher role in the plot as an instrument of the Combine is also illustrated.   

As the characters and plot of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest are used to portray a vast variety of ideas, Nurse Ratched plays a primary role in these allegories. This book achieves a unique level of complexity by layering several different allegories that vary in their depth. The most basic of these is simply the story of men in a mental ward who defy their controlling and dominating nurse through a bold and defiant admission. Here, she is simply seen as the antagonist against the protagonist of R. P. McMurphy, the admission who rallies the patients to defy her. For example, she is defied by McMurphy and the patients when they vote to watch television during their regular working hours. This is one of the first episodes of rallied defiance by the majority of the men. She says, "'I said, Mr. McMurphy, that you are supposed to be working during these hours.' Her voice has a tight whine like an electric saw ripping through pine. 'Mr. McMurphy, I'm warning you!' Everybody's stopped what he was doing. She looks around her, then takes a step out of the Nurses' Station toward McMurphy. 'You're committed, you realize. You are... under the jurisdiction of me...the staff.' She's holding up a fist, all those red-orange fingernails burning into her palm. 'Under jurisdiction and control-' (Kesey, page 144)" The next of these allegories is individuality overcoming the looming Combine, or conformity that condemns imperfection. Nurse Ratched is seen here as a facilitation of the Combine within the ward, meaning that she is devoted to warping the patients who are "mentally-ill" into well-adjusted men that can function regularly within society. As Bromden, the narrator of this book says, "McMurphy doesn't know it, but he's onto what I realized a long time back, that it's not just the Big Nurse by herself, but it's the whole Combine, the nationwide Combine that's the really big force, and the nurse is just a high-ranking official for them. (Kesey, page 192)" In an even more complex allegory that mimics the gospels and Jesus' fight for salvation, Nurse Ratched portrays the Pharisees and Romans, or those who facilitate the ultimate work of sin.
In addition to her allegorical purposes, Nurse Ratched is also used to expose gender stereotypes. By concealing her breasts and embracing masculinity, she strives to gain authority. This exposes gender stereotypes, as this shows the attitude towards authority within American society at the time, as men were considered the primary holders of power, while women were linked with submission and vulnerability. Nurse Ratched means to change her gender identity in order to achieve the images linked with the stereotypes of each gender. Ultimately in the story, the exposure of the breasts, proving that she is undoubtedly a woman, symbolizes her lost power among the men. At her loss of power at the end of the story, Bromden makes this observation: "...And a new white uniform. Some of the guys grinned at the front of it; in spite of its being smaller and tighter and more starched than her old uniforms it could no longer conceal the fact that she was a women. (Kesey, page 320)"  
Nurse Ratched firmly exercises her control over her patients. (http://www.littlereview.com/goddesslouise/movies/cuckoo.htm)


Motifs
Machinery
  1. “But when you shave before breakfast like she has me do some mornings- six-thirty in the morning in a room all white walls and white basins, and long-tube-lights in the ceiling making sure there aren’t any shadows, and faces all round you trapped screaming behind the mirrors- then what chance you got against one of their machines? (Kesey, page 6)”
  2. “The floor reaches some kind of solid bottom far down in the ground and stops with a soft jar. It’s dead black, and I can feel the sheet around me choking off my wind. Just as I get the sheet untied, the floor starts sliding forward with a little jolt. Some kind of castors under it I can’t hear. I can’t even hear the guys around me breathing, and I realize all of a sudden it’s because that drumming’s gradually got so loud I can’t hear anything else. We must be square in the middle of it. I go to clawing at that damned sheet tied across me and just about have it loose when a whole wall slides up, reveals a huge room of endless machines stretching clear out of sight, swarming with sweating shirtless men running up and down catwalks, faces blank and dreamy in firelight thrown from a hundred blast furnaces. (Kesey, page 86)”
Fog
  1. “And then some guy wandering as lost as you would all of a sudden be right before your eyes, his face bigger and clearer than you ever saw a man’s face before in your life. Your eyes were working so hard to see in that fog that when something did come in sight every detail was ten times as clear as usual, so clear both of you had to look away. When a man showed up you didn’t want to look at his face and he didn’t want to look at yours, because it’s painful to see somebody so clear that it’s like looking inside him, but then neither did you want to look away and lose him completely. You had a choice: you could either strain and look at things that appear in front of you in the fog, painful as it might be, or you could relax and lose yourself. (Kesey, page 131)”
  2. “It’s getting hard to locate my bed at night, have to crawl around on my hand and knees feeling underneath the springs till I find my gobs of gum stuck there. Nobody complains about all the fog. I know why, now: as bad as it is, you can slip back in it and feel safe. That’s what McMurphy can’t understand, us wanting to be safe. He keeps trying to drag us out of the fog, out in the open where we’d be easy to get at. (Kesey, page 128)”
Glass
  1. “The glass came apart like water splashing, and the nurse threw her hands to her ears. He got one of the cartons of cigarettes with his name on it and took out a pack, then put it back and turned to where the Big Nurse was sitting like a chalk statue and very tenderly went to brushing the slivers of glass off her head and shoulders. ‘I’m sure sorry, ma’am, he said. ‘Gawd but I am. That window glass was so spick and span I com-pletely forgot it was there.’ (Kesey, page 201)”
  2. “I lurched it up to my knees and was able to get an arm around it and my other hand under it. The chrome was cold against my neck and the side of my head. I put my back toward the screen, then spun and let the momentum carry the panel through the screen and window with a ripping crash. The glass splashed out in the moon, like a bright cold water baptizing the sleeping earth. (Kesey, page 324)”
These quotes depict the various recurring motifs that represent the primary ideas that define One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. They are important to the story, as tangible objects allow the reader to better grasp the abstract concepts they are meant to portray.    

Machinery
There are constant references to machinery throughout One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, as it represents the Combine, the institution of society that systematically weeds out imperfections and warps them into something that fits the uniform mold of societal norms. The machinery is said to be pulsing in the walls of the ward and within the members of the staff. This is because the ward and the staff are instruments of the Combine that work to change the men so they can function in society. Machinery is used because is it tangible and systematic.

Fog
Fog, an idiosyncrasy in Bromden’s perception, represents hiding oneself from the Combine and the challenges of life that threaten an individual. Bromden explains that he struggled to maintain a balance between remaining hidden and not getting lost. However, the arrival of McMurphy helped him gain confidence to emerge from the fog (hiding) and face the challenges of life from the Combine.

Glass
Glass is a representation of the separation between authority and those without power in society, as the breaking of glass throughout the story is often associated with the patients impeding upon the power of authority. Glass separates the men from outside society, and Nurse Ratched often observe the men of the ward from her station behind the glass. McMurphy shatters the glass when he means to defy Nurse Ratched, and Chief Bromden shatters the glass of a window with a control panel when he finally escapes the ward at the conclusion of the book. Each scenario represents a defiance of authority and the Combine.      

The Staff

  1. “McMurphy doesn’t know it, but he’s onto what I realized a long time back, that it’s not just the Big Nurse by herself, but it’s the whole Combine, the nationwide Combine that’s the really big force, and the nurse is just a high-ranking official for them. (Kesey, page 192)”
  2. “But she’s too full of the stuff. While she’s asleep it rises in her throat and into her mouth, drains out of that corner of her mouth like purple spit and down her throat over her body. In the morning she sees how she’s stained again and somehow she figures it’s not really from inside her- how could it be? a good Catholic girl like her?- and she figures it’s on account of working evening among a whole wardful of people like me. It’s all out fault, and she’s going to get us for it if it’s the last thing she does; I wish McMurphy’d wake up and help me. (Kesey, page 166)”
  3. “The nurse- about as big as the small end of nothing whittled to a fine point, as McMurphy put it later- undid our cuffs and gave McMurphy a cigarette and gave me a stick of gum. She said she remembered that I chewed gum. I didn’t remember her at all. McMurphy smoked while she dipped her little hand full of pink birthday candles into a jar of salve and worked over his cuts, flinching every time he flinched and telling him she was sorry. She picked up one of his hands in both of hers and turned it over and salved his knuckles. (Kesey, page 278)”
  4. “So I picked him off and threw him in the shower. He was full of tubes: he didn’t weigh more’n ten or fifteen pounds. (Kesey, page 275)”
  5. “‘Doctor Spivey...is exactly like the rest of us, McMurphy, completely conscious of his inadequacy. He’s a frightened, desperate, ineffectual little rabbit, totally incapable of running this ward without our Miss Ratched’s help, and he know it. And, worse, she knows he knows it and reminds him every chance she gets. Every time she finds he’s made a little slip in the bookwork or in, say, the charting you can just imagine her in there grinding his nose in it.’ (Kesey, page 62-62)”    

The staff of the ward is notably diverse in their ideologies, purposes, and motives. A greater percentage of the staff are simply instruments of the Combine, such as the nurse and the black boys. The Japanese nurse, on the other hand, is a more understanding and empathetic character based on her own past experiences. Essentially, the staff of the ward, though generally a collective instrument of the Combine, still have their own blaring imperfections.    


The Japanese Nurse and the Catholic Nurse
Though the staff generally represents the instruments of the Combine that seek to warp those who are different to fit the mold of society, the individual members of the staff vary in character. A prime example of this difference can be observed between the Japanese nurse who works on Disturbed and the Catholic nurse. The Japanese nurse is depicted as a more caring, sympathetic character who speaks candidly with Bromden and McMurphy, and empathizes with the pain they feel. Chief Bromden observes: “The nurse- about as big as the small end of nothing whittled to a fine point, as McMurphy put it later- undid our cuffs and gave McMurphy a cigarette and gave me a stick of gum. She said she remembered that I chewed gum. I didn’t remember her at all. McMurphy smoked while she dipped her little hand full of pink birthday candles into a jar of salve and worked over his cuts, flinching every time he flinched and telling him she was sorry. She picked up one of his hands in both of hers and turned it over and salved his knuckles. (Kesey, page 278)” Her empathy was most likely gained from the persecution of the Japanese in American society during World War II, as in this setting, society attempted to ostracize and put down certain groups that are different. The Catholic nurse, on the other hand, has all her life stood on the other side of the Combine with a sense of supremacy. Because Catholicism is often a dominant denomination in the sense that it is not often persecuted or ostracized, she has an arrogantly superior attitude to the imperfect men in the ward. She also blames her own imperfections on the defects of the men in the ward. Bromden says, “But she’s too full of the stuff. While she’s asleep it rises in her throat and into her mouth, drains out of that corner of her mouth like purple spit and down her throat over her body. In the morning she sees how she’s stained again and somehow she figures it’s not really from inside her- how could it be? a good Catholic girl like her?- and she figures it’s on account of working evening among a whole wardful of people like me. It’s all out fault, and she’s going to get us for it if it’s the last thing she does; I wish McMurphy’d wake up and help me. (Kesey, page 166)” Though they are both members of the staff, the Japanese nurse understands the pain of trying to be forced into a mold while the Catholic nurse endorses it, and blames the men for tarnishing society and those who can function in it.  
Symbols of both nurses

The Patients
  1. “Harding shook his head. ‘I don’t think I can give you an answer. Oh, I could give you Freudian reasons with fancy talk, and that would be right as far as it went. But what you want are the reasons for the reasons, and I’m not able to give you those. Not for the others, anyway. For myself? Guilt. Shame. Fear. Self-belittlement. I discovered at an early age that I was- shall we be kind and say different? It’s a better, more general word than the other one. I indulged in certain practices that our society regards as shameful. And I got sick. It wasn’t the practices, I don’t think, it was the feeling that the great, deadly, pointing forefinger of society was pointing at me- and the great voice of millions chanting, “Shame. Shame. Shame.” It’s society’s way of dealing with someone different.’ (Kesey, page 308)”
  2. “One afternoon, I don’t recall how long back, we stopped on our way to activities and say around the lobby on the big plastic sofas or outside in the two-’o'clock sun while one of the black boys used the phone to call his book maker, and Billy’s mother took the opportunity to leave her work and come out from behind her desk and take her boy by the hand and lead him outside to sit near where I was on the grass. She sat stiff there on the grass, tight at the bend with her short round legs out in front of her in stockings, reminding me of the color of bologna skins, and Billy lay beside her and put his head in her lap and let her tease at his ear with a dandelion fluff. Billy was talking about looking for a wife and going to college someday. His mother tickled him with the fluff and laughed at such foolishness. ‘Sweetheart, you still have scads of time for things like that. Your whole life is ahead of you.’ ‘Mother, I’m th-th-thirty-one years old!’ She laughed and twiddled his ear with the weed. ‘Sweet-heart, do I look like the mother of a middle-aged man?’ (Kesey, page 295)”
  3. “‘I can’t help it. I was born dead. I had so many insults I died. I was born dead. I can’t help it. I’m tired I’m give out trying. You got chances. I had so many insults I was born dead. You got it easy. I was born dead an’ life was hard. I’m tired. I’m tired out talking and standing up. I been dead fifty-five years.’ (Kesey, page 54)”
  4. “‘Now...THe cross is...Mex-i-co.’ He looks up to see if I’m paying attention, and when he sees I am he smiles at me and goes on. ‘Mexico is...the wal-nut. The hazel-nut. The ay-corn. Mexico is...the rain-bow. The rain-bow is...wooden. Mexico is...woo-den.’ I can see what he’s driving at. He’s been saying this sort of thing for the whole six years he’s been here, but I never paid him any mind, figured he was no more than a talking statue, a thing made out of bone and arthritis, rambling on and on with these goofy definition of his that didn’t make a like of sense. Now, at last, I see what he’s saying. (Kesey, page 135)”
  5. “Even Cheswick could understand it and didn’t hold anything against McMurphy for not going ahead and making a big fuss over the cigarettes. He came back down from Disturbed on the same day that the nurse broadcast the information to the beds, and he told McMurphy himself that he could understand how he acted and that it was surely the sharpest thing to do, considering, and that if he’d thought about Mack being committed he’d never have put him on the spot like he had the other day. He told McMurphy this while we were all being taken over to the swimming pool. But just as soon as we got to the pool he said he did wish something mighta been done, though, and dove into the water. And got his fingers stuck some way in the grate that’s over the grain at the bottom of the pools, and neither the big lifeguard nor McMurphy nor the two black boys could pry him loose, and by the time they got a screwdriver and undid the grate and brought Cheswick up, with the grate still clutched by his chubby pink and blue fingers, he was drowned. (Kesey, page 174-175)”     

Each of these quotes illustrate not only the backstory of each individual character, but present a recurring account of how the men, labelled “different” from the rest of society, came to lose their strength, masculinity, and confidence at the hand of the Combine. They also depict the hopelessness of patients, as they are constantly weakened by the seemingly impregnable force of the Combine. However, they are, in essence, men who simply want to live life according to their own will, even if they do not fit the conventional mold of society.   

Cheswick and Billy Bibbit
Cheswick and Billy Bibbit are characters that undoubtedly parallel each other in One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. Though they are both noted for their suicides, the motive of their suicides are clearly different. Cheswick committed his suicide following McMurphy reluctantly promising to back off from his fight against Nurse Ratched in fear of the Nurse inhibiting his freedom. His suicide was committed as a result of hopelessness, as he found great satisfaction in venerating McMurphy and shadowing him in his efforts to dismantle the Nurse’s “machinery.” Just before his death, he comments on how “...he did wish something mighta been done, though... (Kesey, page 175)” To him, the submission of McMurphy was a signal that even the strongest of people could be broken by the Nurse’s system, and therefore found death the only escape from the Combine. On the other hand, Billy Bibbit’s death was from the guilt of failing McMurphy and the other patients at the ward. Playing the role of Judas in Cuckoo’s Nest’s parallel to the Gospels, Billy Bibbit slits his throat after blaming McMurphy and the other men of the ward on his interaction with Candy, the prostitute. His death was due to the guilt he felt for submitting to the Combine, the very entity he pledged himself against by siding with McMurphy. In essence, the death of Cheswick was due to his feeling of hopelessness against the power of the Combine, while Billy Bibbit’s death was due to his guilt after betraying McMurphy by submitting to the Combine. However, both deaths are ultimately caused by the Combine, making them both victims of society.    
Images that symbolize the deaths of each of the men
  


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