Dora’s Journey


Book Description

Is a story about a girl named Dora and her adventures in a magical world full of mysterious creatures and magic, where she explores her forest and the surroundings of her world




Dora's Bedtime Wishes


Book Description

Every night before Dora goes to bed she makes a wish on Little Star. And now young readers can too! Look at the stars with Dora and her friends, then tell Little Star your wish and give her a spin. Little Star will light up and glow! Happy wishing!




Dora: A Headcase


Book Description

Dora: A Headcase is a contemporary coming-of-age story based on Freud’s famous case study—retold and revamped through Dora's point of view, with shotgun blasts of dark humor and sexual play. Ida needs a shrink . . . or so her philandering father thinks, and he sends her to a Seattle psychiatrist. Immediately wise to the head games of her new shrink, whom she nicknames Siggy, Ida begins a coming-of-age journey. At the beginning of her therapy, Ida, whose alter ego is Dora, and her small posse of pals engage in "art attacks." Ida’s in love with her friend Obsidian, but when she gets close to intimacy, she faints or loses her voice. Ida and her friends hatch a plan to secretly film Siggy and make an experimental art film. But something goes wrong at a crucial moment—at a nearby hospital Ida finds her father suffering a heart attack. While Ida loses her voice, a rough cut of her experimental film has gone viral, and unethical media agents are hunting her down. A chase ensues in which everyone wants what Ida has.




Dora's Underwater Voyage


Book Description

"Journey to the bottom of the sea with Dora and Boots"--Cover.




Dora's Outer Space Adventure


Book Description

Dora and Boots are heading to outer space for an adventure! They are going to help their alien friends get back home to the Purple Planet. Young readers can help Dora by using the stickers to find the way through the starry sky!




Dora


Book Description




Experimental Latin American Cinema


Book Description

While there are numerous film studies that focus on one particular grouping of films—by nationality, by era, or by technique—here is the first single volume that incorporates all of the above, offering a broad overview of experimental Latin American film produced over the last twenty years. Analyzing seventeen recent films by eleven different filmmakers from Argentina, Brazil, Cuba, Mexico, Paraguay, and Peru, Cynthia Tompkins uses a comparative approach that finds commonalities among the disparate works in terms of their influences, aesthetics, and techniques. Tompkins introduces each film first in its sociohistorical context before summarizing it and then subverting its canonical interpretation. Pivotal to her close readings of the films and their convergences as a collective cinema is Tompkins’s application of Deleuzian film theory and the concept of the time-image as it pertains to the treatment of time and repetition. Tompkins also explores such topics as the theme of decolonization, the consistent use of montage, paratactically structured narratives, and the fusion of documentary conventions and neorealism with drama. An invaluable contribution to any dialogue on the avant-garde in general and to filmmaking both in and out of Latin America, Experimental Latin American Cinema is also a welcome and insightful addition to Latin American studies as a whole.




Dora's Dreams


Book Description

A true story of two young people, Dora and Itsu who were sweethearts during the start of the Holocaust. Dora is violently taken away from her large family, her parents and 10 siblings. Dora is imprisoned for 2 years in concentration camps, where she witnesses horrific atrocities. However, Itsu manages to stay out of captivity. After the war is over, Dora and Itsu have no knowledge of each other. Have they survived? Where are they? After an unsuccessful search for Itsu, Dora is pursued by a good man she is about to marry. When Itsu finds this out in an unbelievable way, he rides day and night by motorcycle fighting a horrible rainstorm to stop the wedding...




Cinematic Journeys in Latin America


Book Description

This book critically examines how movies that feature real or imagined explorers and expeditions creatively feature the geography of Latin America. It focuses on how locales are scripted into film plots and artistically depicted, and demonstrates that place is as important as any character in a film, especially in this genre. Nineteen key films are analyzed. Some, like Aguirre, the Wrath of God, Fitzcarraldo, The Other Conquest, Embrace of the Serpent, and The Lost City of Z are based on the exploits of real explorers. Others are fictional, including Apocalypto, Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, and Dora and the Lost City of Gold. The author also discusses the evolution of exploration-discovery films, including trends that will likely be found in forthcoming movies.




Spiritual Films


Book Description

For decades, centuries even, when people thought of spirituality, they thought only of religion. I aim to stretch the tent of spirituality in this e-book to include secular experience. My particular approach to secular spirituality is through the medium of film. Characters in the 43 films I discuss come to spirituality without religion. In some of these films, religion nibbles at the edges of events, as when, in the Brazilian film Central Station, Dora, the cynical letter writer, leaves hard-bitten Rio with a boy she hopes to return to his father and finds herself surrounded by evangelicals, shrines, and churches. She does not have any kind of religious conversion, but there is no denying that the piety of the countryside softened her and escorted her into spirituality. Now and then I quote assorted Buddhists, Muslims, Christians and Jews, but usually only when their remarks throw light on secular matters. I have avoided relying on muddled mystics who write about the Great Turning Cosmic Oneness of Everything. I dont know what they are talking about.