Sunday, December 4, 2011

a universal teenager

Horomones raging, emotions changing, and futures yet to be decided, the life of a teenager is very stressful.  What is she doing with her life?  Where will he go to school?  How will they figure out their future?  The stress piles up and eventually leads to a mental break down.  Every teenager just wants to stay young and not have to deal with the harsh realities of the real world of growing up.  Through out A Catcher in the Rye Holden goes through this crazy emotional roller coaster and the clutch on childhood that represents the life of a universal teenager. 
For one thing though, im sure that the average teen is not as depressed as Holden is.  Everyone has their depressing times in life, but they eventually are followed up with happy times.  It seems as if every time Holden speaks he is depressed about something different.  He is depressed about flunking out of another school, dissapointing his parents, and life in general.  He can not let go of Allie, he is indecisive about girls, and he can not let go of his childhood.  When Holden is looking around Phoebe's room he finds her notebook, "I sat there on D.B.'s desk and read the whole notebook.  It didnt take me long, and I can read that kind of stuff, somne kind's notebook, Phoebe 's or anybody's, all day and all night long.  Kid's nmotebooks kill me" (J.D. Salinger 161.  This passage is an example of Holden still holding onto his childhood.  He loves everything that has to do with kids and childhood because he doesnt want to let go of his own childhood.  Maturity takes place through out the teen years for the most part, but we all have times when we dont want to grow up and be a responsible mature adult we are expected to be.  When Phoebe asks Holden what he wants to do woth his life he says, "What I have to do, I have to catch everybody if they start to go over the cliff....That's all I'd do all day.  I'd just be the catcher in the rye and all" (J.D. Salinger 173).  This proves that Holden is clinging to his childhood and memories from the past.  He doesn't want to mature and be a grown up with a real job and stable future.  his independence of being able to support himself with a job and education is out of his mind.  In a way every teenager is like Holden maybe not as extreme emotionally, but similar in a way.

Monday, November 7, 2011

Kesey's Dissaproval

            The differences between Kesey's novel and Forman's Oscar winning film are very obvious. One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, written by Ken Kesey comes from the perspective of Chief throughout the entire story. The fog and machinery add that mysterious touch to the experience in a mental ward. The reader has the chance to personally experience life in a mental ward through the eyes of a patient. In the film, Forman focuses mainly on a humorous plot along with McMurphy's life of sex and gambling. In a way the film makes Chief seem like he really is dumb. While outside playing basketball, McMurphy says to Chief, "old Indian game, It's called, uh, put the ball in the hole" (Forman). Instead of portraying Chief as the wise man he is, the film makes him seem completely opposite. In a way, the film makes fun of Chief. Kesey must've been very upset over the fact that his story was not expressed the way he meant it to be.
            Another reason why Kesey disapproves of Forman's film is because the characters are not who Kesey originally intended them to be. For example, the Big Nurse is a rather large and in charge woman in the novel, who is a nasty and awful person. On the other hand, in the movie, Nurse Ratched seems like she has a heart. At times she may seem a little bossy, but she does not have the huge stature and precision of a machine. "Practice has steadied and strengthened her until now she wields a sure power that extends in all directions on hair like wires so small for anybody's eye but mine, I see her sit in the centre of this web of wires like a watchful robot, tend her network with mechanical insect skill, know every second which wire runs where and just what current to send up to get the results she wants" (Kesey). Not only is Nurse Ratched's character mismatched, but McMurphy also is not a huge, red-headed farmer in the movie, like he is in Kesey's novel. When Forman takes out these characters traits, it changes the story greatly from how Kesey wanted it to be told. That is why Kesey disapproves of the movie make of his novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest.
 

    

Sunday, November 6, 2011

McMurphy vs. Nurse

 
            Throughout the Cuckoo's Nest there is an ongoing battle between Nurse Ratched and McMurphy. Currently, McMurphy is winning this battle because he is the one representing higher authority. He comes into the mental ward and upsets the Big Nurse's whole system she has going. She wants everything a certain way and when McMurphy changes everything up by taking an authoritive position over all the patients in the ward and the Big Nurse looses it. Also most of the men in the ward find interest and enjoyment in the way McMurphy acts and lives his life. It is mainly everyone against the Big Nurse as of now.
            As the book goes on, I think that McMurphy will be losing the battle. The Big Nurse could at any point take McMurphy into her hands and have electroshock therapy or a lobotomy done on McMurphy. This will take McMurphy completely out of the battle. Since McMurphy is committed, the Big Nurse has complete control over the outcome of McMurphy's life. Therefore, the Big Nurse will win this battle in the end.