Friday, April 29, 2011
Chapter 29
Chapter 29
"'It's all right, Billy. It's all right. No one else is going to harm you. It's all right. I'll explain to your mother.'" (Nurse Ratched, p. 265) It was shortly after this that Billy Bibbit committed suicide by cutting his neck. Yet another display of Ratched's manipulative power, this one sticks out because it caused a death. She knows that Billy's mother is his weak point, and that she can get him to switch sides at the snap of a finger.
"I been away a long time." (Chief, p. 272) As the closing line to this novel, it carries some weight. This is about how far he has come--from pretending to be a deaf, dumb mute to finally achieving escape. Throughout the story, we are given snapshots from his memory, about how he used to live a good strong life, and was a gifted fisherman in his hometown village. He has gone from insane and returned, all because of the power of the influence of McMurphy, who protected him from the manipulative tendencies of the Big Nurse.
Thursday, April 28, 2011
Chapter 28 by Ben Hatfield
Chapter 28
I chose this quote because it shows the ongoing struggle for power in the ward. Even though the Big Nurse has the clear power to end things immediately for McMurphy, McMurphy hangs around in the "battle" and makes the Nurse embarrassed too. McMurphy's latest move, however, is what really forces the Big Nurse to go through with his lobotomy. Ultimately I think that this quote is what symbolizes the Big Nurse's last straw in the fight for power and rule over the other patients at the ward.
"'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'" (257).
I think that this quotation is particularly one of the most important in the book. I believe this because when Harding describes how he feels about his fluttering hands to McMurphy it not only applies to Harding, or even just the patients in the book, but it applies to every individual in the world in their own different way. This quote shows how the social norm is easiest to follow, and in Harding's case his hands are what sets him apart from the normal image of everyone else. And every patient in the ward has a similar situation and doesn't fit in outside.
"I grinned back at them, realizing how McMurphy must've felt these months with these faces screaming up at him" (243).
This quote explains how Chief Bromden feels when he returns from Disturbed and everybody is asking him questions and congratulating him for taking down one of the black boys earlier. Chief is suddenly in the limelight of the ward since McMurphy is still in Disturbed, and he is enjoying every moment of this popularity. The quote also shows how much more comfortable Chief has become with himself over the past few months when McMurphy has been around. With his guidance and positive reinforcement, Big Chief Bromden is finally himself again and is able to talk (instead of being dumb and deaf) with all the other patients.
Wednesday, April 27, 2011
Chapter 27
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Chapters 20, 21, 22, & 23
“You know what I’m talking about, Harding. Why didn’t you tell me she could keep me committed in here till she’s good and ready to turn me loose?” (166). From the moment McMurphy walked into the ward and declared himself ‘bull goose loony’, he has been trying to get Nurse Ratched’s goat. Since then, the nurse and McMurphy have been ‘battling,’ each trying to assume power. Up to this point, it looks as though McMurphy is on top, due to the TV incident. A shift in power is made when McMurphy learns he is committed. Being committed means that he can’t leave the ward until Nurse Ratched says so. If he continues to fight with her, he will never leave. Because he now knows that the nurse holds his fate, McMurphy decides to back off from rattling her.
“You have more to lose than I do,” Harding says again. “I’m voluntary. I’m not committed” (167). McMurphy learns for the first time that he is one of the only patients who actually is required to stay. Not many of the other patients need to be in the ward. They are all just too scared to face reality and they can’t cope with society’s rules. Each one has a particular reason for being in the ward, but none are actually because they are ‘nuts.’ McMurphy tells them to take advantage of life and leave, but no one listens.
”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” (172). Moments before McMurphy broke the window, the patients were at their group meeting. Nurse Ratched expected this to be her final victory over him and establish her rule. Instead, McMurphy stood up for the others in the ward by punching the window “by accident” and taking cigarettes. He finally learned the consequence of not standing up for something (when Cheswick died, he realized it). Also, the window was a symbol of the nurse’s barrier from the ward. McMurphy just broke the barrier between her and the patients.
Monday, April 25, 2011
Ch. 25 By Max Ruditsky
"did that monster bite you? Somebody fix the chiefs thumb-hurry!"(211). This quote shows that McMurphy really cares about the Chief and doesn't want anything to happen because once he is completely out of the "fog" he and McMurphy can form a powerful alliance. This is foreshadowing whats to come, because McMurphy is protecting the chief now, and when McMurphy gets in trouble with the black boys later, the Chief is there.
"Everybody was kinda surprised that Billy had volunteered, took his life jacket off right away, when we found we were short"(214). This is a major turning point in the story, because for his whole life Billy Bibbit has been a timid stuttering rabbit of a man. No one ever knew him to do something this courageous, it seems that McMurphy's trip is bringing the patients out of there shells and giving them new found confidence. This quote is a perfect example of a personality change in one of the patients.
Part 3, Chapter 2
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
Chapters 20, 21, 22 & 23
Monday, April 18, 2011
Chapters 18 and 19 by Max Weiss
Chapters 18 and 19
"The lifeguard was standing on the edge of the pool; he had a whistle and a T-shirt on with his ward number on it. He and McMurphy had got to talking about the difference between hospital and jail, and McMurphy was saying how much better the hospital was. The lifeguard wasn't so sure. I heard him tell McMurphy that, for one thing, being committed ain't like being sentenced. 'You're sentenced in a jail, and you got a date ahead of you when you know you're gonna be turned loose,' he said" (147). Before talking to the lifeguard, McMurphy continually antagonizes Big Nurse and attempts to gain power in the ward. However, after this conversation, McMurphy questions his actions and rethinks his attitude towards Big Nurse. Since he is a "Committed" patient, only Big Nurse has the authority to release McMurphy from the ward, but he is frustrated with his behavior. As a result, McMurphy begins to show more respect for Big Nurse. Ultimately, he gives up power in the ward and among his peers to ensure that he has a chance of being released from the ward on time.
"And that afternoon in the meeting when Cheswick said that everybody'd agreed that there should be some kind of showdown on the cigarette situation, saying, 'I ain't no little kid to have cigarettes kept from me like cookies!' We want something done about it, ain't that right Mack?' and waited for McMurphy to back him up, all he got was silence. He looked over at McMurphy's corner. Everybody did. McMurphy was there, studying the deck of cards that slid in and out of sight in his hands. He didn't even look up. It was awfully quiet; there was just that slap of greasy cards and Cheswick's heavy breathing" (149). After he learns the consequences of disrespecting Big Nurse and her authority, McMurphy no longer stands up for his peers in these situations. McMurphy is known among the patients as the "Bull Goose," illustrating that he has the most power of all the patients. As a result, they always look to him for help during arguments with Big Nurse. However, selfishly, McMurphy does not stand up for his peers because he is only concerned about his release date, and he does not want to anger Big Nurse.
"McMurphy was doing the smart thing. I could see that. He was giving in because it was the smartest thing to do, not because of any of these other reasons the Acutes were making up. He didn't say so, but I knew and I told myself it was the smart thing to do. I told myself that over and over: It's safe. Like Hiding. It's the smart thing to do, nobody could say any different. I know what he's doing" (151). From the Chief's perspective, McMurphy is acting rationally because he is protecting his own interests. The Chief relates McMurphy's situation to a similar predicament his father was in when the white men arrived out west. They told the Chief's father that they would give him two hundred thousand dollars to move off his native land. Wisely, the father compromised with the white men instead of resisting. In McMurphy's situation, he must also adjust to Big Nurse's rules otherwise he will stay in the ward for several years instead of just a few months.
Saturday, April 16, 2011
Chapters 16 and 17 by Emmy Budas
Saturday, April 9, 2011
Chapter 9, 10, and 11
"One by one the patients are sneaking looks at her to see how she's taking the way McMurphy is dominating the meeting...She's too big to be beaten...She's lost a little battle here today, but it's a minor battle in a big war that she's been winning...She don't lose on her losses, but she wins on ours...As soon as you let down your guard, as soon as you lose once, she's won for good" (101). These negative feelings, that are discussed by the Chief, are also the views of most of the other patients in the ward. Even though McMurphy has recently come into the hospitol, he has already started making a difference with the way things are run. He stands up for what he wants and battles the Nurse for superiority. However, there is still a problem which is discussed in this quote. The patients in the ward have given up. The Nurse has already made such a strong impact on their minds and they feel that there is no hope. Even with a powerful man like McMurphy, they don't see a reason to try. I feel that this moment is one of the last times the patients feel this way and they will finally get to see that the Nurse can be over powered.
"But I tried, though...Goddammit, I sure as hell did that much, now, didn't I?" (111). This quote is from McMurphy and he says it right after he fails at lifting an extremely heavy control panel. He is saying this to make himself feel better for not lifting it. However, there is more likely a deeper meaning for this quote. I feel that he is actually saying it to the patients with extreme anger. He is tired of them not sticking up for themselves. McMurphy went to lift the panel even when it was hard to do. He did not know whether or no he was going to succeed, but he still tried. All of the patients in the ward will never stick up for themselves. They are too afraid that something might happen. McMurphy is yelling at them because he wants them to stand up for their freedom. He wants them to be in control and to not be cowards. Even if they don't succeed at it, they could at least give it a try. If not they would never know what could have happened.
Thursday, April 7, 2011
7
Chapter 7 Quotes
"No, he isnt extroardinary. He is simply a man and no more, subject to all the fears ans all the cowardice and all the timidity that any other man is subject to." pg 136
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
Chapter 6 (by Charlotte)
“One Christmas at midnight on the button . . . in comes a fat man with a beard, eyes ringed red by the cold and his nose just the color of a cherry. . .The black boys move in with the flashlights. They kept him with us six years before they discharged him, clean-shaven and skinny as a pole.”(70)
This quote is important to the book because it shows how being in the ward can take everything away from you including your beliefs. The man in this quote is supposed to be Santa Clause and when he enters the ward he his jolly old self that everyone knows him to be. When he leaves the ward he is “shaven and skinny as a pole.” Which is showing that being in the ward strips the patients of everything that defies them. Once they leave that have no spirit and have lost who they are.
“You see that’s a recording playing up there, my friend. We seldom hear the radio. The world news might not be therapeutic. And we’ve all heard that recording so many times now it simply slides out of our hearing, the way the sound of a waterfall soon because an unheard sound to those who live near it. Do you think if you lived near a waterfall you could hear it very long?”(73)
Harding says this to McMurphy when McMurphy starts to get annoyed with the constant playing of the radio over the loud speakers. None of the other patients are bothered by the light music because it has become familiar for them, and it just blends in with whatever else is going on. This shows that their day never changes and they never get to hear or experience anything knew. Also they are in isolation by not being able to see what is on the news and what is going on in the world around them. The patients do not have control on their life, and are almost like the Big Nurse’s prisoners.
“And throws his head back and laughs out loud at the way the guys hustle to get their bets down. That laugh banged around the day room all evening, and all the time he was dealing he was joking and trying to get the player to laugh alone with him. But they were all afraid to loosen up; it’d been too long.”(74)
I thought that this quote was important to the book because it shows how all of the patients are scared to be who they are, and loosen up and have fun. The whole time that they have been admitted they have been told to me be people other than who they really were. In the end I believe that this has effected them more than their actual condition, and the only way that they would be able to get better would be if people accepted them for who they were and never pressured them to be someone different.
Chapter 6,7, and 8
"But if they don't exist, how can a man see them?"(82) This quote takes place right after the Chief dreams about the staff cutting up old Blastic during the night. In the morning they find out that old Blastic passed away in his sleep. The Chief has a mixed reality where the things he imagines are in fact true but he sees them in a way other people can't. The staff did not actually physically cut Blastic open and kill him. But they are the reason for his death. The hospital runs men down till they are old vegatables like Blastic and all they can do is wait to die. This quote also makes me think back to when Cheif described the Big Nurse. He said she was this giant machine and told us she carried around wires and gears in her bag to install in patients to control them. The Big Nurse is not actually a machine but she behaves like one. She has perfectly calculated movements and the perfect look that allows her to control the men. She does not install gears and wires in the men to control them but rather she installs fear. The Cheif can see this but in a slightly different way. Where is the line between reality and imagination? The answer is, there isnt one.
Tuesday, April 5, 2011
Chapter 5
This quote takes place after the group meeting with the Big Nurse and the doctor. When McMurphy notices the way the nurse picks at the Acutes, he angrily compares the group discussions to a pecking party. Just like the first chicken will peck at a spot of blood, the nurse will target weaker patients like Harding. This moment in the chapter sets off McMurphy's new "war" with the Big Nurse as he is determined to stand up against her. It also is a part in the story where every patient is still weak and powerless, while the nurse has absolute control over their actions and opinions of themselves.
"Why, see here, my friend Mr. McMurphy, my psychopathic sidekick, our Miss Ratched is a veritable angel of mercy and why just everyone knows it. She's unselfish as the wind, toiling thanklessly for the good of all, day after day, five long days a week." (pg. 58)
After McMurphy insults the Big Nurse and tries to convince everyone that she is an evil controlling woman, Harding tries defending her. This eventually leads to an ongoing combination of hand gestures and support for Miss Ratched, however finally Harding gives in. This quote shows how hard Harding is trying to support both the nurse and his past opinions, but also how constricted his words are. His support is not genuine and his change in views of the nurse allows us to know that the patients never truly favored the nurse, but just never could do anything against her.
"You're safe as long as you keep control. As long as you don't lose your temper and give her actual reason to request the restriction of the Disturbed Ward, or the therapeutic benefits of Electro Shock, you are safe." (pg. 68)
This quote is when Harding gives McMurphy advice on how to get on the nurse's nerves and win the "war". He mentions how anyone who tries to bother Miss Ratched must keep calm and steer clear of the chance of being treated of a mental illness. All of the patients in the ward have had previous experiences with Miss Ratched's reactions, but McMurphy is the newest addition to the group. He is overconfident and feels that it will be an easy task to take control away from the nurse. Later, we learn that even McMurphy struggles with the new role of being the sacrifice for everyone else.
Sunday, April 3, 2011
Chapter 3
Mine: "They spy on each other. Sometimes one man says something about himself that he didn't aim to let slip, and one of his buddies at the table where he said it ... writes down the piece of information he heard -- of therapeutic interest to the whole ward, is what the Big Nurse says the book is for..." (19). This observation shows the manipulative and controlling attitude of the Big Nurse. She uses medical reasons as a way to control and keep track of all the patients. Also, she's slowly turning the patients against each other. If the patients are all divided and wary of each other, there will never be a united challenge against her power in the hospital. Big Nurse says to McMurry, "I'm sorry to interrupt you and mr.Bromden, but you do understand: everyone ... must follow the rules" (28). Big Nurse sees McMurry as a threat to her power already and is clearly warning him with this statement. She can tell that he is different from all the other patients and has the ability to usurp her control. "But there are some of us Chronics that the staff made a couple of mistakes on years back, some of us who were Acutes when we came in, and got changed over." (19). This statement shows how carelessly patients are treated in this hospitals. Some patients, when they were first admitted, had hopes of being cured and returning to the outside world. However, due to errors made by the staff, the patients were completely ruined and thus became "Chronics," or patients who stayed in the hospital forever.
Saturday, April 2, 2011
Chapter 2
“I don’t remember if I got breakfast or not. Probably not. I can call to mind some mornings locked in seclusion the black boys keep bringing seconds of everything-supposed to be for me, but they eat it instead-till all three of them get breakfast while I lie there on that pee-stinking mattress, watching them wipe up egg with toast.--pg 14 Although the narrator is clearly delusion one cannot help but feel sorry for him. What interests me is that in this exaggerated description, there seems to be some truth. Like him not remembering if he got breakfast. Bromden most likely can’t remember due to medications but how can a person live like that. Especially an insane person needs to feel a sense of security and safety. As a result this quotation shows me that the mental hospital isn’t doing enough for Bromden if he still feels helpless.
“Whoever comes in the door I usually somebody disappointing, but there’s always a chance otherwise, and when a key hits the lock all the heads come up like there’s stings on them.”--pg 15
In my experience when someone opens a door to a classroom, auditorium or any other such place most people turn to see who it is because everyone is curious by nature. A mental hospital is usually anything but normal but to me this quote expresses that sometimes its just that, normal. However the narrator says that most visitors are disappointing, as is to be expected in a mental hospital where patients are made to be calm and without excitement. But this also means that these patients don’t get to have all the aspects of a normal human life because and there disability, and its disheartening.
“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.”--pg 15
“Chief Bromden” is much smarter than most of the people there and especially more than people think he is. Bromden has been around long enough to know the occurrences of life there and the people that go there. But he can tell through subtle clues that this new guy is different. This shows that the Chief knows a lot about the people there and can tell the differences more that most people. It even seems as though he is foreshadowing or predicting an issue surrounding this new patient.
Chapter 2
"Nobody can tell exactly why he laughs; there's nothing funny going on. But its not the way that Public Relation laughs, it's free and loud and it comes out of his wide grinning mouth and spreads in rings bigger and bigger till its lapping against the walls all over the ward. Not like that fat Public Relations laugh. This sounds real. I realize all of the sudden its the first laugh I've heard in years." (16)-- This quote shows how interested the narrator is of the new person in the hospital, Mr. McMurry, and how "dead" the atmosphere is in the hospital. The narrator says he hasn't heard a real laugh in years, this must be a pretty depressing place and nothing interesting of fun ever happens until this man came along. The narrator seems to notice a lot of details about specific things.
"Every morning we sit lined up on each side of the day room, mixing jigsaw puzzles, after breakfast, listen for a key to hit the lock and wait to see what's coming in. There's not a whole lot else to do." (15)-- This quote really hit me and made me feel sorry for the people in this mental hospital. They have nothing exciting in there life, and every day is the same, where nothing happens or is different. Something that is not exciting at all is exciting for them there. I can't even imagine how boring and depressing it is for there people. How could these people be at the hospital for so long doing the same thing every day?
Friday, April 1, 2011
CHAPTER ONE
"So she really lets herself go and her painted smile twists, stretches to an open snarl, and she blows up bigger and bigger, big as a tractor, so big I can smell the machinery inside the way you smell a motor pulling too big a load" (11). Holy cow. The Chief is not like us. He doesn't see the world in our way at all. I wonder how much we can trust of what he says. More than anything, this is a "voice" I want to hear talk more. Compelling.
"It's still hard for me to have a clear mind thinking on it. But it's the truth even if it didn't happen" (13).
That line speaks loudly to me. Clearly even the little introduction so far has a lot in it that can't have happened. But is it the truth? Can it be both things? I'm thinking about a literary tradition called magical realism that comes mostly out of Mexico and Central/South America. Very often what seems to be a rock-hard, realistic world is twisted in some way in these books. Their world is just like ours, but with something very otherworldly in it too. Maybe it takes reaching outside reality sometimes to say something about reality.
In many instances in history and in literature, too, insane people have been seen as prophets or truth-seers. Is the Chief one of these?