Personality and Motivations
McMurphy
is intelligent, charismatic, confident, and revolutionary in the ways that he
challenges oppressive authority. His self-assurance seems out of place when he
is admitted to the hospital as it is a time where it’s expected one would
naturally be solemn. McMurphy is charismatic, which is shown in his
ability to get along with other patients when he arrives at the hospital. McMurphy
is a gambler with what Bromden describes to be politician like charm. He
is also displayed as very sexual, violent, and impulsive according to his file. His liveliness is out of place in the solemn institution he enters. This
non-conformity early on displays McMurphy’s ability to go against the grain
with ease and confidence. Before his arrival patients are seemingly lifeless.
Bromden describes it as if McMurphy’s arrival cleared the “fog”, which
represents a lack of awareness. While the unwritten yet clear social
guidelines in the hospital dictate the way the other patients act McMurphy
quickly distinguishes himself from the rest as he disregards them. While the
other patients repress their emotions McMurphy expresses them.
Throughout the novel McMurphy works to empower the oppressed patients and in
the end sacrifices his freedom and sanity through committing a violent act
against the oppressive figure Nurse Ratched.
Relationships

McMurphy
detests the ‘ball-cutter’ Nurse Ratched as he plainly sees her ‘therapeutic’ remedies
as repulsing acts of tyranny that work to deteriorate the mental patients’
strength and beat them into submission: “Those Chinese Commies could have
learned a few things from you, lady” (Kesey 206). Throughout the novel McMurphy
and Nurse Ratched fight over power. McMurphy bets with the other patients that
he can make Nurse Ratched lose her calm, which she does, and Nurse Ratched
tries to beat McMurphy into submission. After McMurphy strangles Nurse Ratched
she, in retaliation, has him lobotomized. This leaves him as a vegetable. Nurse
Ratched loses her strong grip over the ward and its patients due to his efforts.
He essentially sacrifices himself to destabilize the Nurse’s tyrannical power.
Tragic Hero
Nobility
McMurphy
is not part of nobility. Yet he is displayed continuously going against the
grain and questioning dominant authority in attempt to fight oppression.
In this sense he is a true leader who is capable of empowering and liberating
those around him from oppression.
Tragic
Flaw
McMurphy’s
tragic flaw is his pride and persistent defiance. He is so assured in
his strength that he fails to recognize the places where he is powerless;
because of this he underestimates Nurse Ratched’s power over his fate.
When he finally realizes her control he has already put himself in a leadership
position and his noble qualities keep him from stepping down.
Errors
in Judgment and Responsibility for Fate
McMurphy’s
tragic flaw leads him to underestimate Nurse Ratched and continually antagonize
her. Not willing to recognize weakness he only backs down for a short while when it is already too
late as the Nurse already has it out for him with a sealed fate of
imprisonment in the hospital. McMurphy’s defiance leads him into electro shock
therapy and eventually a lobotomy, which leaves him as a vegetable.
Irreversible
Mistake and Responsibility for Fate
McMurphy’s
irreversible mistake occurs when he strangles Nurse Ratched. This leads
to the death of his sanity and strength as he is then sent to get a lobotomy
that turns him into a vegetable. In addition McMurphy sealed his
imprisonment at the hospital by antagonizing Nurse Ratched and refusing to
escape when he had the opportunity to.
Fall
From Great Heights of Esteem or Tragic Death
McMurphy
immediately distinguished himself as different from the other mental patients when
he is admitted to the hospital because of his pride and defiance. As the
story goes on however his defiance gets him sent to electro shock therapy, it
also solidifies his entrapment in the hospital. McMurphy’s sanity and strength
declines as Nurse Ratched has his shock treatment continue.
When
Billy commits suicide because of Nurse Ratched’s threats to tell his mom that
he slept with a prostitute McMurphy strangles Nurse Ratched. This final
act of insubordination leads to McMurphy’s lobotomy, a surgical operation that
cuts connections in the brain’s prefrontal lobes. After this operation McMurphy
is turned into a vegetable and all the freedom, sexuality, and strength
McMurphy clung to is lost. This tragic fall is especially difficult
because it displays a character of such strong will forcefully conformed and
overpowered by the oppressor he worked to defeat. Bromden kills McMurphy as he
wants him to die with dignity. In this way his death is honorable. Though it isn’t
by his own means Bromden knows McMurphy wouldn’t have wanted to stay alive in
such a state of weakness as a testament to the Nurse’s tyrannical power.
Evokes
pity and fear in audience
The
fear for McMurphy is consistent throughout the book as he is challenging forces
he is not equipped to defeat. As Nurse Ratched’s power and ability to control is
continuously reaffirmed the fearfulness of McMurphy’s antagonizing ways grows
stronger as the reader begins to grasp the negative repercussions of angering
such a powerful character. The fear of McMurphy is rooted in his impulsiveness,
which leads him to make irreversible mistakes such as strangling Nurse Ratched. He is violent and sometimes unpredictable, which endangers others and
himself. In the book his impulsive tendencies make the patients and the
reader fear for his fate in the hospital even though he was sane upon entering
the institution.
The
reader can’t help but pity McMurphy as his sense of strength and resistance
against oppression is taken away under Nurse Ratched’s tyranny. A character
with such a strong will rendered helpless, his fate in the hands of a cunning
tyrannical Nurse he had antagonized before realizing her true control over his
fate. All the other patients looked up to him. The reader couldn’t help
but root for McMurphy to find a way to resist submission and preserve his
strong will, strength, and freedom. He was the patients’ leader that they
looked to for guidance. Pity is evoked for McMurphy when he sacrifices his
sanity and freedom in order to give the patients strength and inspire them to
resist oppression themselves; a noble act that leads to a tragic end.
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