FACE TO FACE: TRAUMA AND AUDIENCE IN BETWEEN THE …

her rather heavy, yet handsome, face” (BA13-14). Woolf creates a more ominous face-to-face encounter in the morning meeting of Bartholomew Oliver and his grandson, George. Distorting his face with a mask improvised from the morning’s newspaper—daily purveyor of politics, violence, and war—Bartholomew turns himself into ................
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