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One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest Literary Analysis

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Words 556
Pages 3
Darren Mah
Mrs. Kirkeby
English IV Honors
18 August 2014

The author of One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Ken Kesey, narrates the story from the point of view of Chief Bromden, a character known to have cases of hallucinations and shows signs of being outside of reality especially when he begins to see the fog around him.
Some of the strengths to using Bromden to narrate the events of the story are because of the fact that he has been “on the ward longer’n anybody” (Kesey 21). He is able to describe to the reader in detail of the daily routine of the patients and their exact times when he notes that “Six-forty-five the shavers buzz and the Acutes line up in alphabetical order at the mirrors…” (Kesey 33) or “Seven-thirty back to the day room” (Kesey 34). By appearing deaf and dumb, Chief Bromden is able to tell the readers about what goes on beyond the patient’s side of the ward when he informs the reader that “the staff usually don’t even notice me; I move around in my chores, and they see right through me…” (Kesey 131). …show more content…
The reader is then able to listen to the staff’s discussion about McMurphy and how Ratched has the power to keep

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