Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In Hollywood trade magazines "goona-goona" was a descriptive word for films or photos showing women of color with bare breasts, [1] usually in a supposed spirit of ethnographic interest like National Geographic. The word goona-goona comes from the 1932 film Goona-Goona, An Authentic Melodrama of the Island of Bali by Andre Roosevelt and Armand ...
Mangku Muriati (born in 1967) is a traditional-style Balinese painter and priestess from Kamasan village near Klungkung, Bali, Indonesia.. Mangku Muriati, born in 1967, paints in traditional Balinese form, known as Kamasan-style, where the aesthetic form and most stories relate to the wayang kulit puppet theatre.
[1] [3] She returned to Bali in 1987, where she found work with a jeweler-silversmith. [1] Murni was married once and later divorced as her husband took a second wife for children. [1] As women filing for divorce was seen as a defiance of the local traditional adat law in Bali, she was granted a divorce only when her husband later filed the ...
In trance, the women dancers enter, holding their kris daggers aloft. Trance and Dance in Bali is a short documentary film shot by the anthropologists Margaret Mead and Gregory Bateson during their research on Bali in the 1930s. It shows female dancers with sharp kris daggers dancing in trance, eventually stabbing themselves without injury. The ...
The Balinese cat, with their svelte figure, plush coat, and striking blue eyes, carries an air of elegance that could easily mislead one to think them aloof. However, beneath that sophisticated ...
File:A Man for All Seasons (1966 movie poster).gif; File:A Mermaid in Paris.jpg; File:A Midsummer Night's Dream Poster.jpg; File:A Midsummer Night's Sex Comedy film poster.png; File:A Million Miles Away film poster.png; File:A Minecraft Movie poster.jpg; File:A Most Wanted Man Poster.jpg; File:A new kind of love poster.jpg; File:A Nice Girl ...
B. File:Baazi film poster.jpg; File:Baba Baby O poster.jpeg; File:Baishe srabon movie poster.jpg; File:Beporowa Poster.jpg; File:Bhaijaan Elo Re film poster.jpg
They attempted to force all elements of Indies society to live in accordance with British morals. However, they were unable to eliminate the keeping of njais, and, indeed, some British men kept a njai of their own. [16] After the British returned the Indies to the Dutch in 1815, a new wave of immigration – including some women – began.