Psychopathic Behaviours and Power: Investigating Psychopathy, Sadism, and Insanity in Ken Kesey’s One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest
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University of Ammar Theledji -Laghouat
Abstract
Mental illness has been on the agenda of numerous researchers for several years. It is considered
as an ambiguous subject, especially in literary studies. Psychopathic behaviour, sadism, and
insanity for instance, have been classified as severe mental illnesses and were only tackled as a
personality trait but they have not been analyzed as state behaviours. Namely, understanding
what triggers such behaviours in literary characters is but an attempt to mirror the current studies
done on the concepts of psychopathy, sadism, and insanity. In this light, this thesis examines the
three psychopathic behaviours and their link to power in the novel of the American novelist Ken
Kesey One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1962). It is based on a descriptive and analytical
method in order to demonstrate how these behaviours are represented as a state in selected
characters: Chief Bromden, Nurse Ratched, and Randle McMurphy. Additionally, characters with
such behaviours feel a sense of domination and control over what they consider weaker subjects.
In this regard, this research is theoretically framed by Freud, Lacan, and Foucault to decipher
how these behaviours are exhibited in the novel. This dissertation concludes that psychopathy,
sadism, and insanity have a parallel link with the discourse of power
