Over the past century the definition of crazy has evolved. People have come to realize that to be different is not to be crazy. In 1962, Ken Kesey wrote One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest shining a light on how the institutions treated someone who fit their description of “crazy”. Randle Patrick McMurphy, the main character in the book, is sent to a mental hospital in Oregon to finish out his jail sentence. McMurphy quickly understands that his purpose for going to the mental hospital is not just for an easier time, instead he has been placed there to save a group of unique men who have been mentally trapped by the head nurse, Nurse Ratched. As this book progresses Mcmurphy pursues his quest by trying to liberate his fellow patients and become the figure of hope they have always needed. …show more content…
As soon as he was heard entering the building the patients knew he was special. The narriorter, Chef, glances at Mcmurphy as the black nurses force him into the ward and we as the readers can tell from Chef’s description that this man was not like any of them. Mcmurphy is wearing a leather jacket and a ball cap, and he has this swagger that is unlike anything the patients have seen in a long time. Mcmurphy begins to talk to the men and discover more about them and why they are in his institution and it does not take long for a light bulb to go off in his