A tale of two places

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When “Northanger Abbey” is introduced Jane Austen depicts a vivid picture of where Catherine’s journey begins which happens to be Northanger Abbey. Though Catherine was born in Fullerton, throughout the novel the reader witnesses the transformation and growth of young Catherine. This is the reason the novel can be seen as a bildungsroman. Catherine grows and matures as a person, moves to a new place, and figures out a new way to perceive her surroundings.
At the beginning Catherine’s wide—eyed innocence is untouched and unaffected by reality, and she is enthusiastic about everything and trusts everyone. She has had no experience in life to shatter her childish illusions, and these illusions run free in Northanger Abbey. As Catherine grows older facing many obstacles in her life she finally decides to go to Woodston and Woodston is a place or reality for her. Woodston is the stage in her life in which she begins to see life through her eyes not through her novels. These two contrasting places are just one of the many doubles or pairs that Jane Austen uses in her novel to highlight each other. The theme of “two sides to every coin” is shown through her characters and even in the setting. When Catherine makes her change to her “second side” she finds herself in a whole new place where she can be that new person with Henry.
Northanger Abbey functions, in Catherine’s life, as a place that is a slice of upper-class life and parental authority, but this same place functions as Catherine’s imaginary life. “Northanger Abbey! These were thrilling words, and wound up Catherine's feelings to the highest point of ecstasy. Her grateful and gratified heart could hardly restrain its expressions within the language of tolerable calmness.”(pg. ...

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...cts of Northanger Abbey point out the calm, peaceful qualities in Woodston. Without these two places Catherine’s transformation would not be as clear or prevalent.
Catherine’s Journey takes her to a brand new place with a brand new life because ultimately she is a brand new Catherine. Her personal characteristics are altered and her action have changed. When Catherine is introduced in the novel she is a young, naive girl and she grows into this woman making choices of her own with her husband Henry in Woodston. Though Catherine continues reading her novels she has found what life looks like without the novel in the way. She has finally separated fiction and reality and that is the difference between Northanger Abbey and Woodston. They both look like normal places, but Catherine’s view of the world did not completely change until she life the gloomy Northanger Abbey.

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