preview

The Impact Of Romanticism In Jane Austen's Northanger Abbey

Decent Essays

One of the many joys of reading is that a great novel can transport you to a completely different realm, dimension, or world. There are many genres of books that can do so, but one of the most important ones during the Romantic era was gothic literature. In Jane Austen’s novel, Northanger Abbey, it is clear that she is commenting on the impact of gothic literature during this era. Austen creates this commentary based on the continual exaggeration and use of the word ‘horrid’ by characters, Catherine Morland’s tendencies to get caught up in terrifying or dramatic fantasies, and the incessant mockery of the manners of speech and expressions used within the gothic genre.
It is common for young people to be influenced by slang, mottos that …show more content…

This is just after Catherine finds out that the General’s wife died suddenly and alone. After hearing about the tragic death of Mrs. Tilney, Catherine immediately jumps to truly horrible thoughts of murder and suspicion, which later gets her into trouble. Austen would have been aware of the use of horrid as an everyday word, as well as in relation to gothic fiction, but the manner in which Catherine uses it within the novel is one of the reasons it is a satire and not just a work of gothic fiction.
In the novel, Catherine has a tendency to lose her head and become caught up in her day-dreams, fantasies, and nightmares. She consistently creates situations or ideas in her head that are much worse than probable in her real life. As K.A. Miller writes in "Haunted Heroines: The Gothic Imagination and the Female Bildungsromane of Jane Austen, Charlotte Brontë, and L. M. Montgomery", the ideals of what Catherine has read so much of has influenced her mind very powerfully, perhaps even dangerously so. Miller says that Catherine, “Has allowed what she has read, rather than the evidence of her own eyes to script her vision of life. This failure to exercise reason, alongside her imagination, jeopardizes her” (Miller 9). Catherine allows her imagination to be so thoroughly influenced by the gothic romances and novels that she reads that she consistently gets

Get Access