Upside Down is a novella defined by its single, powerful setting: a psychological landscape split between the familiar surface of reality and the inverted purgatory beneath it.
Description: The world where the main characters live their daily lives. It is often experienced by Caleb in muffled echoes and hazy, obscured visions, suggesting his emotional detachment.
Psychological Significance
The catalyst for the world’s collapse. It represents the point of unbearable grief that Caleb’s psyche can no longer process or deny, forcing the psychological split.
Psychological Significance
The sounds and actions of the surface world, friends talking, life continuing, are distorted.
Psychological Significance
The “real” people moving above the glass, who are described as calloused, guarded, and numb.
Description: The primary setting of the novella. It is a mirrored, inverted reality, a physical manifestation of repressed grief and trauma, where gravity works in reverse and the landscape is an emotional mirror of the world above.
Psychological Significance
The barrier separating the two worlds, which Caleb stands on.
Psychological Significance
Described as clinging together like gnarled veins, forming a dense, impassable ceiling above the characters.
Psychological Significance
The Upside Down is often dark, dim, and defined by shadows.
Psychological Significance
Sebastian’s territory is the darkest, most shadow-filled part of the Upside Down.
Description: The moments or places where the two realities briefly touch or where the characters make a breakthrough.
Psychological Significance
Locations, like a street corner or a house, where Caleb’s memory of the real world and the inverted version of Maddy overlap.
Psychological Significance
The figurative and literal movement toward the glass barrier.