Miranda Mania


Book Description

Miranda Cosgrove is impossible to resist—she has two hit shows on Nickelodeon, iCarly and Drake & Josh, and her first single “Leave It All to Me” is a Hot 100 hit. She’s starred in movies like School of Rock and Yours, Mine & Ours and guest starred on some of the coolest shows on television.




Miranda Cosgrove


Book Description

"Describes the life and career of Miranda Cosgrove"--Provided by publisher.




Diabolos Darkness


Book Description

Zen van Nihil and the Shadow Society of Shadow Knights, Chaos Magi, Nightwatch, Deathwatch, and Keepers of Secret wage war against an Multiversal Great Old One known as Diabolos Darkness which through it eldritch entropy is devouring worlds into the desperation of darkness where aberrations and monsters roam and lawless anarchy reigns among the sentient individuals as all of creation depends on the Shadow Society.




The Tide Was Always High


Book Description

In 1980, the celebrated new wave band Blondie headed to Los Angeles to record a new album and along with it, the cover song “The Tide Is High,” originally written by Jamaican legend John Holt. Featuring percussion by Peruvian drummer and veteran LA session musician “Alex” Acuña, and with horns and violins that were pure LA mariachi by way of Mexico, “The Tide Is High” demonstrates just one of the ways in which Los Angeles and the music of Latin America have been intertwined since the birth of the city in the eighteenth century. The Tide Was Always High gathers together essays, interviews, and analysis from leading academics, artists, journalists, and iconic Latin American musicians to explore the vibrant connections between Los Angeles and Latin America. Published in conjunction with the Getty's Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA, the book shows how Latin American musicians and music have helped shape the city’s culture—from Hollywood film sets to recording studios, from vaudeville theaters to Sunset Strip nightclubs, and from Carmen Miranda to Pérez Prado and Juan García Esquivel.




From Tejano to Tango


Book Description

Author of two books on Issac Albeniz, including Issac Albeniz: A Guide to Research (1998), Walter Aaron Clark has compiled thirteen essays that discuss the various aspects of Latin American music. The essays cover the social and political impact the music generated as well as the rhythmic development of the various genres. In this essential book, significant personalities, including Carmen Miranda, are discussed. The scope of the contributors is vast as divergent musical styles such as the Macarena dace craze, Bob Marley's reggae music and the seductive strains of the tango are analyzed.




Hello, Hello Brazil


Book Description

DIVA study of the foundation of Brazilian popular music and its effect on the formation of national identity and cultural expression./div




Majolica Mania


Book Description

The first comprehensive study of the most important ceramic innovation of the 19th century Colorful, wildly imaginative, and technically innovative, majolica was functional and aesthetic ceramic ware. Its subject matter reflects a range of 19th-century preoccupations, from botany and zoology to popular humor and the macabre. Majolica Mania examines the medium’s considerable impact, from wares used in domestic settings to monumental pieces at the World’s Fairs. Essays by international experts address the extensive output of the originators and manufacturers in England—including Minton, Wedgwood, and George Jones—and the migration of English craftsmen to the U.S. New research including information on important American makers in New York, Baltimore, and Philadelphia is also featured. Fully illustrated, the book is enlivened by new photography of pieces from major museums and private collections in the U.S. and Great Britain.




Education Mania


Book Description

Education Mania attempts to explain how the university degree has become the new doctor. It explores solutions and subject areas that prove a doctor is the new college. The solutions include having a college to nothing, precision education, getting rid of school buses, child labor, and apprenticeships. An example of a college to nothing is when a professor leads the criminal justice system to discover a way to treat prisoners better, then a janitor with nothing cleans the jail floors. You could have no educational attainment and become a neurosurgeon. You don’t necessarily have to be an janitor with no formal school? An example of an apprentice would be a resident who trains with an experienced physician.




Miranda Cosgrove


Book Description

Presents insights into Miranda Cosgroves life, including her inspirations, rise to stardom, and achievements.




Desire, Violence, and Divinity in Modern Southern Fiction


Book Description

In this groundbreaking study, Gary M. Ciuba examines how four of the South's most probing writers of twentieth-century fiction -- Katherine Anne Porter, Flannery O'Connor, Cormac McCarthy, and Walker Percy -- expose the roots of violence in southern culture. Ciuba draws on the paradigm of mimetic violence developed by cultural and literary critic René Girard, who maintains that individual human nature is shaped by the desire to imitate a model. Mimetic desire may lead in turn to rivalry, cruelty, and ultimately community-sanctioned -- and sometimes ritually sanctified -- victimization of those deemed outcasts. Ciuba offers an impressively broad intellectual discussion that gives universal cultural meaning to the southern experience of desire, violence, and divinity with which these four authors wrestled and out of which they wrote. In a comprehensive analysis of Porter's semiautobiographical Miranda stories, Ciuba focuses on the prescribed role of women that Miranda imitates and ultimately escapes. O'Connor's The Violent Bear It Away reveals three characters whose scandalous animosity caused by religious rivalry leads to the unbearable stumbling block of violence. McCarthy's protagonist in Child of God, Lester Ballard, appears as the culmination of a long tradition of the sacred violence of southern religion, twisted into his own bloody faith. And Percy's The Thanatos Syndrome brings Ciuba's discussion back to the victim, in Tom Moore's renunciation of a society in which scapegoating threatens to become the foundation of a new social regime. From nostalgia for the old order to visions of a utopian tomorrow, these authors have imagined the interrelationship of desire, antagonism, and religion throughout southern history. Ciuba's insights offer new ways of reading Porter, O'Connor, McCarthy, and Percy as well as their contemporaries who inhabited the same culture of violence -- violence desired, dreaded, denied, and deified.