Pip's journey from home follow the second trait of the Bildungsroman, provinciality. This is when Pip leaves his familiar surroundings and his life as a common apprentice and goes to London to start a respectable life as a gentleman. As a gentleman, Pip condescends people of lower class, including Joe. He gets so caught up in the rich, high-class aspect of being a gentleman that he loses sight of the generous, kind aspect of being a gentleman. Pip has an epiphany when he condescends Joe during Joe's visit to London and as Joe is leaving, Pip feels badly. This is the first time that Pip realizes he is a jerk.
The next trait of the Bildungsroman that the novel contains is that the character is tested by love and is drawn to the destructive love. Pip's two loves are Estella and Biddy. Estella is the unhealthy love to whom Pip is instantly drawn. He puts her on a pedestal and she leaves him heartbroken and disappointed. Pip's epiphany in this stage occurs when he discovers that the convict Magwitch is Estella's father. Here he realizes that the whole time he has worshipped her, she was below him in social class as the daughter of a convict. This realization helps him to take her off of the