Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The Gothic Novel
- It was a big change from the
sentimental to the gothic novels
- Men were worried thatthe dramatic stories of
love would influence young women to disobey
their families when selecting a spouse
- Introduced supernatural elements and
was often set in an exotic location
- Austen satirises the gothic by
including niether of these elements
and by setting her story in England
- Gothic novels influence Catherine's falty
assumptions about General Tilney and his
involvement in the death of his wife
- Leads to Henry educating her and her
growth throughout this bildungsroman
- The drama of Catherine's real life
is no less vivid than the worlds she
reads about in novels
- The reality is often worse
- Austen frequently references Ann Radcliffe's
'The Mysteries of Udolpho'
- Henry's retelling of the Gothic horror tale
on their way to Nothanger Abbey influences
Catherine's thoughts that evening
- Shows Henry's influence
over Catherine
- Catherine unlocks the cabinet in her
room, expecting to find something
horrible, and finds only laundry bills
- Eleanor acts as the repressed
gothic heroine, despite the fact
that Catherine strives to be so
- The suddenness of her reputed illness; the
absence of her daughter, and probably of her
other children, at the time—all favoured the
supposition of her imprisonment. pg. 211