![]() She first came to national attention when her large-scale work the Gonzales Cantata was featured in The Wall Street Journal, The Atlantic, National Review, Fox News, and on The Rachel Maddow Show. On March 4th at 7pm in Barnes Hall the Chorus and Glee Club will perform Bynes' Three Dialogues, Mobley will perform solo selections, and the evening will culminate with a roundtable discussion about the project with Bynes, Mobley, Professor Martha Guth (professor of voice at Ithaca College and co-founder of the project), and Professor Ed Baptist (professor of History at Cornell and co-founder of the Freedom on the Move database).Ĭomposer Melissa Dunphy specializes in political, vocal, and theatrical music. Mobley will give a solo voice masterclass on Friday, March 3rd in Barnes Hall. On March 3rd and 4th, Bynes and countertenor Reginald Mobley will be visiting campus to speak about the project, perform selections, and work with students. How do we empower ourselves and others when we are frustrated with an increasingly bleak reality? How do we continue to believe in love and care when inhuman acts of violence and greed drown out hope? The Cornell Chorus’ 2023 Empowerment through Music event centers around a recently premiered project: “Freedom on the Move, Songs in Flight.” Basing their music on the Cornell-founded “Freedom on the Move” database (the largest crowdsourced database of fugitive slave advertisements in North America), composers and performers including Shawn Okpebholo, Mason Bynes, Tsitsi Ella Jaji, Rhiannon Giddens, and more collaborated to weave narratives from the source material to sound out liberation and re-humanization of people escaping enslavement. “Hetumoger” or “het Mogor” as ‘seven Hungarians’.Empowerment Through Music Empowerment Through Music 2023: the Hungarian chronicles use “Magor” for “Scythia” or “Magoria” to refer to part of “Scythia” 3) the name of one of the leading clans, the clan of “Meger” and 4) an ethnic name, i.e. It was used as 1) a personal name, “Muageris” and “Magor,” the latter of whom was one of the forefathers of the Hungarians according to their original ethnic myth 2) a toponym for the ancient homeland, i.e. The noun “Magyar” had four coherent functions. 950) enumerates the “clan of Meger” among the “Turk” clans, and centuries later the Hungarian gestas and chronicles mention “Hetumoger,” “het Mogor” as “seven Hungarians.” If one compares the Byzantine sources with internal sources, it is possible that King “Muageris” can be inserted into the frame of the written data. ![]() Some scholars have observed the similarity between the name “Muageris” and the ethnonym “Magyar.” Another Byzantine work (De Administrando Imperio ca. Around the year 530, a Kutrigur-Hunnic king lived who was mentioned as “Muageris” by Byzantine authors. “Magyar” is now the vernacular name of the Hungarians who first emerged as a distinct group in the ninth century, but this noun appeared much earlier and not in a group-identifying function. On the other hand, the history of a name and the object it denote can lead in different directions: a name could identify more peoples or groups, and conversely, a single ethnic group could have many denominations. person, state, clan, ethnic group) can be confusing and thus can be confused. On the one hand, communities were organized in several ways, and the different kinds of identities (e.g. But if we consider how people assigned and used names in the early Middle Ages, we are confronted with limits and problems.
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