The
story takes place in the psychiatric ward of a hospital, and
is narrated by Chief Bromden, an Indian patient who is a paranoid-schizophrenic.
The Chief views events through the distorted lens of his own
insanity, and this is especially noticeable in the some of the
hallucinatory episodes in the first chapter. His job in the
hospital is to sweep floors. Everyone believes that he is deaf
and dumb, although this is merely an act on his part that he
has kept up for the fifteen years he has been confined to the
hospital.
This is the background
against which the first chapter should be read. It begins with
the Chief being taunted by the three “black boys,”
who are aides in the psychiatric ward. He imagines they are
coming to get him, and he also mentions the Big Nurse, describing
her in terms of a powerful machine. This is just how he imagines
her to be. The Big Nurse, the fifty-year-old woman who is in
charge of the ward, arrives, and tells the black boys to shave
the Chief. But he hates being shaved before breakfast, and he
hides in the mop closet. They find him there, and although he
struggles and gets confused, they do what they have to do. Chief
Bromden is then taken to the Seclusion Room and given pills
to calm him down. He has managed to reveal to the reader that
he intends to tell a story, about a man named McMurphy.
McMurphy turns out
to be a new admission to the ward. He is not like the other
men there. He talks loudly, walks with a swagger, and laughs
a lot, whereas the others are timid and never laugh. He announces
to the men in the day room that he is a gambler; he reminds
the Chief of a car salesman or a stock auctioneer. He says he
has been declared a psychopath.
Bromden describes
the patients, who are divided into Chronics, who are in the
hospital permanently, and Acutes, who are there for treatment
and will eventually be released. McMurphy soon finds out that
the leader of the patients, the president of the Patients’
Council, is Dale Harding. They engage in some repartee which
McMurphy appears to win. The other Acutes crowd round him to
find out what he is like. McMurphy says he was doing time on
a work farm for assault and battery, and then requested a transfer
to the hospital. He is amiable to all the patients, shaking
hands with the Chronics, even those known as Wheelers and Walkers
and Vegetables. Then the Big Nurse arrives and tells him he
must takes his Admission shower; he must stick to the rules.
McMurphy makes it clear that he is not used to keeping to anyone’s
rules but his own.
On the very first
day, the Big Nurse, Miss Ratched, pegs McMurphy as a manipulator,
someone who wants to take over the ward, using everyone for
his own ends.
Bromden describes
the coldly efficient way the Big Nurse runs the ward, and the
three black assistants she carefully selected. He describes
the routines of each day on the ward—washing, eating,
taking medication; daily amusements such as cards and puzzles;
visits from the young resident doctors, and from a public relations
man trailing a group of ladies, telling them how much improved
the ward is from years ago; and patients going for appointments
at Occupational Therapy or Physical Therapy. Bromden describes
the ward as a factory for what he calls the Combine—the
regimented society which imposes machine-like conformity on
everyone. The hospital is where defective parts are fixed and
returned to the Combine.
At noon there is
a group meeting, run by the Big Nurse, with a doctor also present.
The purpose of the meeting is to discuss the patients’
mental problems. On McMurphy’s first day, the discussion
begins with Harding’s problems with his wife, and then
turns to McMurphy. The doctor quizzes him about his previous
record; McMurphy gives spirited replies that the doctor and
nurse do not know quite how to deal with. Then the doctor explains
their theory of the Therapeutic Community. They try to teach
the patients how to get along in a group, because that is the
only way they will function in normal society. The Therapeutic
Community is run in a democratic way, in which patients vote
on the issues before them. They are encouraged to bring up grievances
and discuss them.
After the meeting,
McMurphy points out to the Acutes that it was like a bunch of
chickens pecking each other. Everyone was attacking Harding,
emphasizing his weaknesses, all in the name of helping him.
McMurphy picks out the Big Nurse as the chief culprit, explaining
that she is out to deprive him of his masculinity. She is trying
to make him and all the others weak so that they will follow
the rules. Harding is forced to admit that McMurphy is right.
He says that all the patients are just like timid rabbits. McMurphy
argues that the men in the ward are no more crazy than the average
man in the street. He challenges them about why they are so
scared of a middle-aged woman, the Big Nurse. He encourages
them to show a little more backbone. They tell him that if they
do, they might get shipped upstairs to the Disturbed ward, or
even worse go to the “Shock Shop” for electro-shock
therapy (EST). But McMurphy still urges them to fight back,
to put the theory of the Therapeutic Community to their advantage
by using their votes on some issues, just to show that the Big
Nurse has not taken over completely. After Harding argues that
there is no way McMurphy or anyone else can get the better of
her, McMurphy bets five dollars that he can, and before the
end of the week too. Many of the Acutes take him up on the bet.
McMurphy is bothered
by the volume of the music that plays over the loudspeakers,
which interferes with his card-playing. Harding persuades him
not to complain about it. McMurphy continues to play cards with
the other Acutes, gambling with cigarettes and winning, and
then letting the others win back their losses. He also figures
out that Chief Bromden is not really deaf.
In the morning, McMurphy
is the first patient to rise. He sings in the latrine, and Bromden
realizes how different McMurphy is from everyone else he has
known. He wonders how McMurphy managed to avoid being molded
by the Combine. McMurphy teases one of the black boys after
he is told that it is against the rules for him to be issued
with toothpaste before six-forty-five. He then disconcerts the
Big Nurse by appearing in the hall wearing only a towel, explaining
that his clothes were taken from him. The Big Nurse orders one
of the black boys to ensure that McMurphy is issued a change
of clothes. She is flustered by the incident, and tries to cover
up for it by bullying the black boys.
This incident encourages
McMurphy to believe he can easily get the better of the Big
Nurse. He is exuberant, full of stories, gambling with the other
Acutes at cards and anything else he can think of. He asks the
Big Nurse to turn the music down, but she refuses. He then asks
if they can take their card game to another room. The Big Nurse
says the hospital cannot afford to open two day-rooms.
At the afternoon
meeting, the doctor proposes that the ward should put on a carnival.
McMurphy had suggested the idea to him in a private interview
they had earlier in the day. But the Big Nurse effectively kills
off the idea. Then Dr. Spivey, again after prompting from McMurphy,
brings up the idea of another day-room. The Big Nurse pours
cold water on it, but the doctor persists, and the idea appears
to be adopted. McMurphy then begins to dominate the meeting,
and Bromden realizes that the Big Nurse has suffered a temporary
defeat.
In the next few days,
McMurphy ensures he does not let himself appear upset by anything
the nurses or the black boys do. Instead, he laughs a lot, and
this aggravates them. But on one occasion, he allows himself
to get angry. This is at a group meeting, where the other Acutes
fail to back him up when he requests a change in the schedule
that would enable them all to watch the World Series on television.
McMurphy resolves to bring the matter up for a vote again. He
also boasts about how he could break out of the hospital whenever
he wishes. He says he could lift a huge control panel and toss
it through the specially made screen windows. He takes bets,
tries to lift the panel and fails. But he is undaunted, saying
that at least he tried.
A few days later,
on the day of the World Series, McMurphy brings up the matter
again at the group meeting. Twenty hands are raised in support
of the proposition, but the Big Nurse says that is not enough,
because there are forty patients on the ward, and a majority
is needed. But then Bromden raises his hand in support. The
Big Nurse tries to claim that the meeting was closed, and the
vote invalid, but nevertheless, the men gather round the TV
to watch the game. The Big Nurse flicks a switch in the control
panel and the picture goes off. She then loses her composure
and tries to get the men to return to their duties, but they
ignore her.
Analysis
Part 1 covers the first week that McMurphy is in the ward. There
are many signs already of the kind of beneficial effect he is
having on the patients. For example, Chief Bromden, although
he is over six and a half feet tall, feels himself to be small
and weak. But when he shakes McMurphy’s hand, some of
McMurphy’s strength is transmitted to him, and he feels
his hand has got bigger. McMurphy also gets Harding to admit
that the Big Nurse is not helping them, but keeping them submissive.
McMurphy forces them to see that the therapy sessions that are
ostensibly designed to help them are in fact having the opposite
effect. The Big Nurse ruthlessly exposes their weaknesses and
they never have a chance to overcome them. McMurphy has thus
begun to wake everyone up to what is really happening in the
ward. He is a man who somehow has escaped the reach of the Combine.
Society has not been able to shape him into a conformist mold.
He delights in his own individuality, his determination always
to be himself.
When the men vote
for the switch in the schedule so that they can watch the World
Series, it is a major step in their recovery. They are starting
to realize that they can have some power in their lives; they
do not always have to be downtrodden.
Part I also shows
the conflict building up between McMurphy and the Big Nurse,
which is one of the central aspects of the plot. It is a struggle
between freedom and oppression, individuality and conformity,
sexuality and sexual repression. Although it takes place in
a psychiatric ward, it can also be interpreted as a struggle
in American society between those two opposing sets of principles.
The ward is a microcosm of the whole society.
At this point, McMurphy,
although he is genial and friendly to the other patients, is
primarily out for himself. He does not yet have the sense of
responsibility towards the patients that he will later develop.
Interspersed with
the events of the story are Chief Bromden’s reminiscences
of his early life, and his observations about society as the
Combine, the huge machine that enforces conformity. The Big
Nurse is merely society’s representative in the ward,
so she tries to mold the men like the Combine does. The cruelty
and ruthlessness of this process is conveyed by the Chief’s
stories about what has happened to other patients who passed
through the ward, especially Max Taber, Ellis, and Ruckley.
These are ominous foreshadowings of what may become of McMurphy.
It is through Bromden’s
mind, distorted as it is by his paranoia (which is noticeable
in the first line of the book: “They’re out there”)
that the central image of machinery is conveyed. He also gives
the name fog to the mental confusion he feels. He believes the
hospital possesses a “fog machine” in the walls,
and it is turned on whenever the Big Nurse needs to establish
her control. The fog is probably the result of the many EST
treatments that the Chief received.
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