One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest Practice Test 2026 – Comprehensive Exam Prep

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How does McMurphy relate to Bromden pretending to be deaf?

He tells him a joke about deafness.

He scolds Bromden for making noise.

He uses sign language to communicate.

He shares his own memory of picking beans, listening to gossip, and he tells everyone what others said; Bromden says he's too little to do that.

The key idea here is how two characters connect through voice and memory in a setting that tries to mute them. McMurphy relates to Bromden by opening up about his own past and the way he can still hear and reflect what others are saying. He recalls a working memory—picking beans—and uses it to show how information and gossip move through people. By saying he tells everyone what others said, he demonstrates a shared social act: turning others’ voices into a spoken, communal experience. Bromden’s comment that he’s “too little to do that” highlights his own sense of limitation but also marks a moment where McMurphy’s storytelling invites Bromden into participation and challenges the ward’s suppressive control. This option best captures the supportive, connective moment where McMurphy’s memory-sharing and willingness to vocalize others’ words bridges Bromden’s act of pretending to be deaf with a sense of belonging and voice within the group. The other choices don’t convey that collaborative, memory-based connection or the way McMurphy’s act legitimizes Bromden’s place in the ward’s social world.

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