- Playing
- Why Thanksgiving?
- From
- Barry Vogel
Professor Hugo Freund teaches Social and Behavioural Sciences at Union College in Barbourville, Kentucky and visits with us about the roots of Thanksgiving beginning in the 1600's, in what is now the north-eastern United States, through to it's role as a gathering of friends and family without sectarian religious direction. The program was recorded in 2002 at the Annual meeting of the American Anthropological Association in New Orleans, Louisiana in the lobby of a rather noisy hotel. It was first broadcast in 2009 after most of the hotel's background rumble could be electronically hushed. We began our conversation by discussing how the comtemporary concept of Thanksgiving is acknowledged.
The book Hugo Freund recommends is "The Popes Against The Jews: The Vatican's Role In The Rise Of Modern Anti-Semitism," by David I. Kertzer.
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Piece Description
Professor Hugo Freund teaches Social and Behavioural Sciences at Union College in Barbourville, Kentucky and visits with us about the roots of Thanksgiving beginning in the 1600's, in what is now the north-eastern United States, through to it's role as a gathering of friends and family without sectarian religious direction. The program was recorded in 2002 at the Annual meeting of the American Anthropological Association in New Orleans, Louisiana in the lobby of a rather noisy hotel. It was first broadcast in 2009 after most of the hotel's background rumble could be electronically hushed. We began our conversation by discussing how the comtemporary concept of Thanksgiving is acknowledged.
The book Hugo Freund recommends is "The Popes Against The Jews: The Vatican's Role In The Rise Of Modern Anti-Semitism," by David I. Kertzer.




