In "Crossing the cuckoo's nest", Bruden's chief trusts Randolph Patrick McMurray and the homicide and associates with his colleagues. A journey of a man hospital named Randolph Patrick McMur who passed North American psychosis in the 1960s following the book "Flying over the Cuckoo's Bird's Nest" first published in 1962 - a book by Ken Casey McMurphy is a prisoner who pleaded insanity to escape the long-term sentence of statutory rape - it turned out to be due to a minor girl; "Mr. McMurphy told the doctor," Wow, can not become a stick " .
Flying over cuckoo's bird's nest in cuckoo's nest was done at a mental hospital in the northwest Pacific coast. The narrator of this novel is Brom Chief, Bromden, also known as a mentally disabled semi-Indian. And everyone thinks he is a hearing impaired. The facility is dominated by a cold and accurate woman, Nurse Ratched, with a computed gesture and a calm, mechanical approach. She has absolute authority to jump over cuckoo's nest ... ...? In 1975, the movie included Kendy 's novel "Flying Over the Nest", the role of Randall McMurphy in breaking rules and regulations to make hospitals a reality. Stop insanity to eliminate his prison labor. After listening to his request in prison, McMurphy was sent to a mental hospital.
Braomaden, an abnormally tall American inhabitant trapped in the psychiatric ward of Oregon State, suffers from the mental state of delusional schizophrenia. The fictional character of Ken Casey's "Fly over the Cuckoo's Bird's Nest" suffered from extreme mental illness, but he also became a victim of social asphyxiation and exacerbated Bromden's condition It was. Delusion type schizophrenia is a rare mental disorder that causes severe delusions and hallucinations and other less severe symptoms.
As a storyteller of One Flyw who flew over cuckoo's nest, the semi-American Indian chief Bromden pretending to be hearing loss in the spiritual sanctuary of Oregon has been neglected for 10 years. He is 6 feet 7 inches tall, but his fears and delusions come from what is called The Combine. Its purpose is to force society into a fictional civilized civilization, but that is definitive The real problem of crazy. As a novel by Ken Kesey "Flying Over the Nest", a nurse responsible for making the patient wise may be crazy (Merriam - Webster, Insanity). Even if the disease is diagnosed, the patient may show the most normal symptoms. In many cases of novels, the line about who is crazy is ambiguous.