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Jefferson lecture in the humanities

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3
BOOKS
259
PAGES
~4h 19min
READING TIME

About Author

Francis Barton Gummere

Völsung (Old Norse: Vǫlsungr [ˈvɔlsuŋɡr̩], Old English: Wæls) is a figure in Germanic mythology, where he is the eponymous ancestor of the Völsung family (Old Norse: Vǫlsungar, Old English: Wælsings), which includes the hero Sigurð. In Nordic mythology, he is the son of Rerir and was murdered by the Geatish king Siggeir. He was later avenged by one of his sons, Sigmund, and his daughter Signy, who was married to Siggeir. Völsung's story is recorded in the Völsung Cycle, a series of legends about the clan. The earliest extant versions of the cycle were recorded in medieval Iceland; the tales of the cycle were expanded with local Scandinavian folklore, including that of Helgi Hundingsbane (which appears to originally have been part of the separate tradition of the Ylfings), and form the material of the epic poems in the Elder Edda and of Völsunga saga, which preserves material from lost poems.

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As the United States celebrates the bicentennial of its independence, the dream of racial equality in America remains unfulfilled. In this eloquent and forcefully argued book, the distinguished historian John Hope Franklin gauges the persistent disparity between the goal of racial equality and the facts of discrimination. (Book jacket).

How the series evolves

beginning
Democracy and Poetry
0.0· tough start
finale
Racial equality in America
0.0· messes up the ending
overall
0.0· maybe series needed more care

Books in this Series

Racial equality in America

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As the United States celebrates the bicentennial of its independence, the dream of racial equality in America remains unfulfilled. In this eloquent and forcefully argued book, the distinguished historian John Hope Franklin gauges the persistent disparity between the goal of racial equality and the facts of discrimination. (Book jacket).