Danusha v goska biography channel
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Danusha V. Goska's Blog, page 25
Why Race Hustlers Want You to Hate Green Book. And Why Audiences Love It
I had a big smile on my face during the first five minutes of Green Book. Director Peter Farrelly is famous for gross-out comedies like Dumb and Dumber. Green Book is about black-white interaction during Jim Crow. I didn't think the fart-joke king could pull off a serious film. I feared that any artistic merit would sink under preachy political correctness. But Green Book is a fun movie and a worthy work of art.
It's Frank "Tony Lip" Vallelonga, an Italian-American living in the Bronx, is a bouncer at New York's Copacabana nightclub. He's hired to drive Dr. Don Shirley, a black, Jamaican-American pianist, on a concert tour of the South. Shirley needs, not just a driver, but muscle. Frank will serve as bodyguard as well as chauffeur. The eponymous green book is The Negro Motorist's Green Book, an annual published by Victor Hugo Green from It informed blacks about wh
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Danusha V. Goska
Love, Secrets, and Second Chances—February’s Must-Read Books Await!
Danusha V. Goska was born to Eastern europeisk, peasant immigrants in New Jersey. She has lived in fjärrstyrd villages and large cities in Africa, Asia, europe, on both coasts, and in the heartland, of America. She has traveled extensively, often alone, bygd hitchhiking. She has been published bygd Basic Books, Oxford University Press, TheScreamOnline, and Beliefnet. Her writing has won the New Jersey State Council on the Arts Grant, the PAHA Halecki Award, and others. Professional critics have called her work "inspirational," "important," "courageous," and "groundbreaking." Goska holds an MA from UC Berkeley, and a PhD from Indiana University Bloomington. She teaches at WPUNJ.
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Danusha V. Goska's Blog
Wicked
Wicked is very popular but it hasn't enchantedeveryone
She's twenty-four years old and sheweighs a hundred pounds. She's pretty but conventionally so. Plainly human, likethe rest of us, she will eventually wither and die. But right now she'stwenty-four and a bare-backed gown of hip-hugging satin and ostrich feathersbillows about her.
She resists his seduction. He sings toher – "Cheek to Cheek." They dance beside a pool ofwater. He is charming and she is charmed. The music, and the scene, begin as conventionalpatter and rise to passionate intensity. Her dance expresses that whichelevates the human above the animal; her movements defy that which reducesmortals to dirt. She, freed of human limitation, wafts like the wind; she flowslike water. She has joined the eternal elements; she is black and white, theelemental colors of clouds and constellations.
Near the conclusion, though, threetimes, he lifts her, spins her, and she spreads her legs. He