Girl in Red Overalls

Girl in Red Overalls
Author: Thaddaeus English
Publisher: Xlibris Corporation
Total Pages: 96
Release: 2012-09-19
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1479714739

A Cognitive Story A young girl moves from a small village and away from her mundane depressive life in search of adventure and love, spurred on by the dream of helping her brother she moves to the capital to expand her knowledge and learn something that could help her brothers life get better. She finds disillusioned citizens and corruption filling the air, as unease fills the streets while the city re-establishes itself, a chance meeting with a slick smooth talking inventor takes her life to a place she never thought, delving into a plot to overthrow the corrupt government agenda.

Hershey Herself

Hershey Herself
Author: Cecilia Galante
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 340
Release: 2008-05-06
Genre: Juvenile Fiction
ISBN: 1416954635

When twelve-year-old Hershey runs away with her mother to a women's shelter, she worries about who will take care of her cat, how she'll compete in a talent show with her best friend, and if she'll survive being on a new bus route with her sworn enemy.

An Epistemology of Criminological Cinema

An Epistemology of Criminological Cinema
Author: David Grčki
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 143
Release: 2024-04-23
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 1040021026

Standing at the intersection of criminology and philosophy, this book demonstrates the ways in which mythic movies and television series can provide an understanding of actual crimes and social harms. Taking three social problems as its subjects – capitalist political economy, structural injustice, and racism – the book explores the ways in which David Fincher’s Fight Club (1999), HBO’s Game of Thrones (2011–2019), and Jordan Peele’s Us (2019) offer solutions by reconceiving justice in terms of personal and collective transformation, utopian thinking, and the relationship between racism and elitism, respectively. In doing so, the authors set out a theory of understanding the world based on cinematic and televisual works of art and conclude with a template that establishes a methodology for future use. An Epistemology of Criminological Cinema is authoritative and accessible, ideal reading for undergraduate and postgraduate students, criminologists, philosophers, and film, television, and literary critics with an interest in social justice and social harm.

Serenade

Serenade
Author: Toni Bentley
Publisher: Vintage
Total Pages: 321
Release: 2024-02-06
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 0593315294

Toni Bentley, a dancer for George Balanchine, the greatest ballet maker of the 20th century, tells the story of Serenade, his iconic masterpiece, and what it was like to dance—and live—in his world at New York City Ballet during its legendary era. At age seventeen, Toni Bentley was chosen by Balanchine, then in his final years, to join the New York City Ballet. From both backstage and onstage, she carries us through the serendipitous history and physical intricacies and demands of Serenade: its dazzling opening, with seventeen women in a double-diamond pattern; its radical, even jazzy, use of the highly refined language that is ballet; its place in the choreographer’s own dramatic story of his immigration to the United States from Soviet Russia; its mystical—and literal—embodiment of the tradition of classical ballet in just thirty-three minutes. Bentley takes us inside the rarefied, intense, and thrilling world Balanchine created through his lifelong devotion to celebrating and expanding female beauty and strength—a world that, inevitably, passed upon his death. An intimate elegy to grace and loss and to the imprint of a towering artist and his transcendent creation on Bentley’s own life, Serenade: A Balanchine Story is a rich narrative by a dynamic artist about the nature of art itself at its most ephemeral and glorious.