Preview

One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest: A Psychological Analysis

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1530 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest: A Psychological Analysis
When asked to picture a mental institution, many opeople picture Jack Nicholson's infamous Randle Patrick McMurphy and Nurse Ratched from One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. In earlier days, the oppressive behavior of the nurse may have been an accurate description. Currently, things are much different because of HIPAA laws and Recipients Rights, both of which protect patients privacy, rights, and ensure the best possible care of the patient. Another contributing factor to the improvement of mental institutions and the mental health field in general is the more focused schooling that psychologists and psychiatrists must complete. Mental Institutions have a very long past, and that past hasn't had a very good impact on its reputation. Around …show more content…
In the mid-1950s, the number of hospitalized mentally ill individuals in Europe and American peaked. In England there were nearly 150,000 in 1954. In the United States, the number peaked at 560,000 in 1955. Toward the mid-1960s, many seriously mentally ill people were removed from institutions. The patients in the United States were directed toward local mental health facilities, and the number of patients in institutions dropped from 560,000 to 130,000 in 1980. A major reason the numbers dropped so dramatically was because of anti-psychotic drugs--they helped many patients lead more successful lives. One negative that came from releasing so many from the institutions was that many people became homeless because there was inadequate housing and there was no follow-up care. (Gaffney, 2002). Because so many people were released from the institutions, many closed in the 1970s and 1980s and others were converted to "short-stay" treatment centers. In 1963, the Community Mental Health Centers Act provided federal money for developing a network of community-based mental health services. (Science Museum,

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    PER REPORTER: Author said his sister (Ashley) feeds her man before she feeds her own children. He said she also got her food stamps on September 16 and went out and made groceries to her husband's (Harry) likings. He said his mother (Amanda) told him when Ashley went to make groceries she told the children she was going to bring them something back from the store. However, he said Amanda told him when Ashley made it back she only brought something back from the store for her and Harry's daughter (Honesty). He mentioned that Kadaisha was crying and upset yesterday and he heard Harry calling the child a "B word". He said Kadaisha was asking Ashley and Harry for some of their food but they would not give her any but they gave some to Honesty. He said he then said to Kadaisha “they better leave her alone” which resulted…

    • 398 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Original Summary: McMurphy wishes to go on a fishing trip with the other patients and a prostitute he knows, but Nurse Ratched denies him permission. The doctor later ends up allowing them to go, but Chief has an internal conflict within himself on whether or not he should go with them and risk revealing that he isn’t actually deaf and dumb. Later that night, Chief accidentally reveals to McMurphy that he can hear and talk, and when McMurphy tells him that he should expose everything he hears, Chief says that he isn’t bold enough like McMurphy to do that. McMurphy makes a deal with him, that if he pays Chief’s fee for the trip and helps make him stronger, then Chief has to help him lift a control panel in the tub room. The next day, when the group goes and stops at a gas station, the attendant tries to take advantage of them, but McMurphy says they’re crazy killers, causing the patients to see that they can use their illnesses to their advantage. After the trip, McMurphy sees that Billy is attracted to the prostitute, later setting up a date for them…

    • 403 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Throughout One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, there are signs that McMurphy is a comic Christ-like figure; despite his apparent faults and shortcomings, his actions match that of a tragic hero who saves his people. McMurphy may be considered boorish and in many ways immoral, however, he has other characteristics that resemble Christ- McMurphy has a modest background as a logger, he helps his people rise up against the ward, and he also has a humiliating and sacrificial fall when he is lobotomized. In Ken Kesey’s One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, there are analogies between McMurphy and Jesus’s actions and teachings, behavior and influence to their followers, and deaths…

    • 1150 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    population is growing a ming boggling rate, we need to make an effort to slow the use of resources so there will be some for our future generations…

    • 854 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest takes place in a mental institution in the Pacific Northwest. The narrator of the novel is Chief Bromden, also known as Chief Broom, a catatonic half-Indian man whom all of the inmates and staff assume is deaf and dumb. Bromden often suffers from hallucinations during which he feels the room filling with a dense, overwhelming fog generated by a huge mechanized matrix called The Combine which controls everyone in its grasp. The institution is dominated by Nurse Ratched (Big Nurse), a cold, precise woman with calculated gestures and a calm, mechanical manner. When the story begins, a new patient, Randall Patrick McMurphy, arrives at the ward. He is a self-professed “gambling fool” who has just come from a work…

    • 5004 Words
    • 21 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    In the novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest by Ken Kesey, nurse Ratched takes away the patients freedom physically, mentally and emotionally. Nurse Ratched was known as the “big nurse” and was a former Army nurse who wasn’t treated great. It became her life to get revenge because of how she was treated and is referred to as a rat and readers are reminded that the rats in the Middle Ages carried the Black Plague. This description represents her well as she was a demonic and crazy person with all of the patients at the mental institution.…

    • 2176 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” was written by Ken Kesey in 1962, I have read up to page 145 or the end of Part 1. The narrator of the book is Chief Bromden, who is a long-term patient in Nurse Ratched’s, or Big Nurse, psychiatric ward. Chief Bromden pretends to be deaf and dumb, allowing him to listen to all the secrets and stories of his inmates. Bromden has been patient at the ward the longest ,second to the Big Nurse, since World War II. At the beginning of the story Bromden tells us the different names the patients have, like Acutes and the Chronics. Acutes are younger patients who doctors believe are sick enough to be fixed. Where he Chronics are divided into Walkers like Bromden, or Wheelers or Vegetables. Chronics are people who can…

    • 601 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The narrator of this novel is “Chief Bromden”, who also happens to be one of the main characters. He has been admitted into the Oregon psychiatric hospital for about 10 years, for recurring hallucinations and paranoia (known as schizophrenia). In this novel, he is known as “deaf and mute”. Because of this, majority of the people in the hospital ignore him. Nurse Ratched is in charge of the mental patients, and she is harsh to all of them.…

    • 1546 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the literary criticism Madness and Misogyny in Ken Kesey’s One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest by Daniel Vitkus, he argues that generally the people that are in the ward are not actually insane, but just think differently from society. This different ideology and “reasoning” the patients have cause them to be rejected by the world around them and sent off to the mental institution (Vitkus 64). He also believes that society has this innate “hegemonic power” over everyone (Vitkus 65). The patients are then continually put down through rules and a loss of individuality in the ward. This lack of individuality and lack of power the patient's hold to express themselves and fulfill any of their wants and needs under the harsh rule of Nurse Ratched…

    • 1416 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The medieval times brought us men in shining armor and women captured by dragons for those knights to rescue. It also brought upon the dark ages which unfortunately risen the popularity of the lunatic (insane) asylums. In those days, people who were determined to be mentally ill were given a place to stay where they were treated for their illness. In todays’ society we have gone away from institutionalizing individuals because of mental illness and looked toward alternative ways of treatment most notably by prescribing psychiatric medication. This tactic was implemented to put the mentally ill back out onto the street and minimize the overcrowding that was happening in the institutions. Today most of the “asylums” have been shut down and for some reason most of the mentally ill are being housed in our state and federal prisons.…

    • 1190 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In Ken Kesey’s book, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, the patient Chief Bromden has definitive psychological issues which present in the form of hallucinations, an inaccurate perception of reality, and conspiracy delusions. In the novel, Chief Bromden is subjected to a myriad of misdiagnoses which lead to ineffective treatments such as shock therapy and incorrect medications (Kesey, 35). If Chief Bromden were suffering today, what would a modern diagnosis of his symptoms reveal, and how would it help rather than hinder his recovery?…

    • 668 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In the movie, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest based on the novel by Ken Kesey, Randle McMurphy is sent to a mental institution for acting mentally ill in a work camp. At first, McMurphy believes that it would be easy to live in a mental institution, but he soon sees that this is not true. McMurphy was astonished when he found out that many of the patients volunteered to be there even though they were treated like animals. With this treatment, it is fair to say that the patients were not becoming better. Because of this, McMurphy’s goal of avoiding work camp became a goal of helping the patients escape the institution. Throughout the movie, McMurphy shows his selfless ways by putting the lives of the different patients before himself. On McMurphy’s…

    • 282 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    There is an agreement that about 2.8% of the US adult population suffers from severe mental illness. The most severely disabled have been forgotten not only by society, but by most mental health advocates, policy experts and care providers. Deinstitutionalization is the name given to the policy of moving severely mentally ill patients out of large state institutions and then closing the institutions as a whole or partially. Deinstitutionalization is a multifunctional process to be viewed in a parallel way with the existing unmet socioeconomical needs of the persons to be discharged in the community and the development of a system of care alternatives (Mechanic 1990, Madianos 2002). The goal of deinstitutionalization is that people who suffer day to day with mental illness could lead a more normal life than living day to day in an institution. The movement was designed to avoid inadequate hospitals, promote socialization, and to reduce the cost of treatment. Many problems developed from this policy. The discharged individuals from public psychiatric hospitals were not ensured the medication and rehabilitation services necessary for them to live independently within the community. Many of the mentally ill patients were left homeless in the streets. Some of the discharged patients displayed unpredictable and violent behaviors and lacked direction within the community. A multitude of mentally ill patients ended up incarcerated or sent to emergency rooms. This placed a huge burden on the jail systems.…

    • 2151 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    Continuum of Care Paper

    • 2112 Words
    • 9 Pages

    Prior to 1963, when President John F. Kennedy signed the community Mental Health Centers Act, persons with any mental health problems were institutionalized in public mental institutions. But the signing of the act brought about change by allocating funds for the construction of community mental health treatment centers and began the release of thousands of psychiatric patients from state hospitals. The number of patients in public mental hospitals reached a peak of 558,922 in 1955. Between 1970 and 1986, the number of in-patient beds in state and county hospitals declined to…

    • 2112 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    For centuries, psychiatric hospitals have been used in America as an approach to control the mentally ill. As a matter of fact, “psychiatric hospitals, also known as mental hospitals and mental asylums, are hospital or wards specializing in the treatment of serious psychiatric illnesses” (“Psychiatric Hospitals”). Although the very first psychiatric hospital in the world was opened in 705 AD by Muslims in Baghdad, the first in America was not established until the late 18th century. These hospitals served as places of refuge for the mentally ill since their beginning. With that being said, some asylums were known to treat their patients poorly which brought forth major criticism in later years. Ultimately, the history of psychiatric hospitals is one of great turmoil in the United States.…

    • 833 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays