What was McMurphy's mental illness?

Each film takes up specific gendered mental illnesses – Susanna is diagnosed with Borderline Personality Disorder, seven times more likely in women than men, and McMurphy with Anti-Social Personality Disorder, three times more likely in men than women.
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What did McMurphy have?

McMurphy shows many signs and symptoms of antisocial personality disorder. The first and most noticeable trait of antisocial personality disorder is a charming and friendly personality (Blair 9).
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What disorder does Chief Bromden have?

Chief Bromden presented a long-standing history characterized by the complex features of Schizophrenia.
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Is Randle McMurphy insane?

McMurphy represents sexuality, freedom, and self-determination—characteristics that clash with the oppressed ward, which is controlled by Nurse Ratched. Through Chief Bromden's narration, the novel establishes that McMurphy is not, in fact, crazy, but rather that he is trying to manipulate the system to his advantage.
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Why did McMurphy get a lobotomy?

McMurphy is given a lobotomy for his attack on Nurse Ratched. When he is returned to the ward after the operation, he is a vegetable. That same night, Bromden suffocates McMurphy with a pillow.
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The Reason for Almost All Mental Illnesses - Prof. Jordan Peterson



Is Chief mentally ill Why or why not?

By Ken Kesey

Chief Bromden is a Columbia Indian who suffers from schizophrenia. Although he plays a central role in the story, he is largely an observer. Chief is an interesting narrator because he is certainly not unbiased, and his mental illness can also shed doubt on his reliability.
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What does a lobotomy do to a person?

The intended effect of a lobotomy is reduced tension or agitation, and many early patients did exhibit those changes. However, many also showed other effects, such as apathy, passivity, lack of initiative, poor ability to concentrate, and a generally decreased depth and intensity of their emotional response to life.
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Is McMurphy a sociopath?

McMurphy's actions towards the nurse and fellow patients makes him the perfect example of a psychopath; he is manipulative, has difficulty controlling his behavior, and is sexually promiscuous.
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Why is McMurphy in the mental institution?

Spivey explores with McMurphy the reason he has been sent to the mental hospital from the prison work farm, where he was held previously. The doctor asks McMurphy whether he is faking mental illness to get out of work, and McMurphy admits slyly that he believes there is nothing wrong with his mind.
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What is the message in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest?

One of the messages conveyed towards the reader is the importance of freedom against oppression. McMurphy is a prime example of how self sacrifice plays a key role in rebellion. This later inspires Bromden to escape the ward and finally gains his freedom to the real world.
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What is unusual about McMurphy?

What is unusual about McMurphy? McMurphy does not act like others. He is loud, laughs, and very bold.
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What mental illness does Harding have?

This diagnosis of Delusional Disorder, Persecutory type, would allow Harding's real issue to be confronted (his homosexuality), which Harding demonstrates that he wants to do, but feels he cannot speak the truth about. The setting of this film is in the 1960s, which works against Harding's favor.
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How is mental illness represented in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest?

Cuckoo is slang for crazy, which, in turn, is slang for the mentally ill. One goes one way, one goes in the opposite direction, one flies over the nest, but the implication is that whoever is in the cuckoo's nest is not nourished.
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What is Nurse Ratched's one weakness?

When McMurphy attacks her and tears her shirt open in front of the men, he reveals her weakness—she's a woman after all. Big breasts don't lie.
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Why does McMurphy get electroshock therapy?

McMurphy apologizes to Chief for getting him involved in the fight as the two are led to electroshock therapy. Alluding to his stay in a Chinese prison camp in the Korean War, McMurphy refuses to cooperate with Ratched to prevent the electroshock.
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What was wrong with Billy bibbit?

Billy Stutters

Billy Bibbit's psychological problems manifest themselves as a stutter. Billy reveals in group therapy that he flunked out of college because he had to quit ROTC.
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What do McMurphy's shorts symbolize?

Thesis. McMurphy's boxers symbolize his blatant sexuality and attitude because of the allusions to Moby Dick.
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Why did McMurphy sacrifice himself?

Under the invisible but heavy pressure of the other patients' expectations, McMurphy makes the ultimate sacrifice to ensure that Ratched cannot use Billy's death to undo everything they have gained. By attacking Ratched and ripping her uniform, he permanently breaks her power but also forfeits his own life.
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What is a McMurphy maniac?

Come episode 9, we finally learn what, exactly, a McMurphy entails. "McMurphy" is the codeword for patients who emerge from the Pill C process in a vegetative state, their minds having been captured in the matrix by GRTA the computer.
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Is Nurse Ratched a psychopath?

In the book and the film of “One Who Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest”, Nurse Ratched was not a psychopath, she was an unbelievably mean, sadistic person. The original Nurse Ratched's actions during the story show us that something terrible must have happened in her past to make her this way.
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How old is McMurphy in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest?

McMurphy is interred at the hospital for "diagnosis and possible treatment," reads Nurse Ratched, who continues: "Thirty-five years old. Never married.
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How did McMurphy change the ward?

"McMurphy helps the people in the ward find their way back from the fog and return back to the real world" (Lupack). McMurphy's laughter and jokes, along with his personality, cause a great change in the patients of the ward and he helps them cure their "mental illness".
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What does it feel like to be lobotomized?

Freeman believed that cutting certain nerves in the brain could eliminate excess emotion and stabilize a personality. Indeed, many people who received the transorbital lobotomy seemed to lose their ability to feel intense emotions, appearing childlike and less prone to worry.
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Are there any living lobotomy patients?

Before his death in 1972, he performed transorbital lobotomies on some 2,500 patients in 23 states. One of Freeman's youngest patients is today a 56-year-old bus driver living in California.
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Can you still get lobotomized?

Lobotomies are no longer performed in the United States. They began to fall out of favor in the 1950s and 1960s with the development of antipsychotic medications. The last recorded lobotomy in the United States was performed by Dr. Walter Freeman in 1967 and ended in the death of the person on whom it was performed.
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