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The Indo-Europeans Summary

The Indo-Europeans: Archaeology, Language, Race, and the Search for the Origins of the West by Jean-Paul Demoule (Emeritus Professor of Archaeology, Emeritus Professor of Archaeology, Universite de Paris I Pantheon-Sorbonne)

The existence of an Indo-European linguistic family, allowing for the fact that several languages widely dispersed across Eurasia share numerous traits, has been demonstrated for several centuries now. But the underlying factors for this shared heritage have been fiercely debated by linguists, historians, archaeologists, and anthropologists. The leading theory, of which countless variations exist, argues that this similarity is best explained by the existence, at one given point in time and space, of a common language and corresponding population. This ancient, prehistoric, population would then have diffused across Eurasia, eventually leading to the variation observed in historical and modern times. The Indo-Europeans: Archaeology, Language, Race, and the Search for the Origins of the West argues that despite its acceptance and use by most researchers from different disciplines, such a model is inherently flawed. This book describes how, beginning in the late eighteenth century, Europeans began a quest for a supposed original homeland, from which a small conquering people would one day spread out, bringing their language to Europe and parts of Asia (India, Iran, Afghanistan). This quest was often closely tied to ideological preoccupations and it was in its name that the Nazi leadership, claiming for the Germans the status of the purest Indo-Europeans (or Aryans), waged genocide. The last part of the book summarizes the current state of knowledge and current hypotheses in the fields of linguistics, archaeology, comparative mythology, and genetics. The culmination of three decades of research, this book offers a sweeping survey of the historiography of the Indo-European debate and poses a devastating challenge to the Indo-European origin story at its roots.

The Indo-Europeans Reviews

With this ambitious volume, Jean-Paul Demoule exposes and criticises the theoretical and methodological flaws inherent to the 'tree model,' which propounds that Indo-European languages and speakers dispersed and branched out from a unique point in space and time. An impressive display of historiographical knowledge stretching across several centuries and disciplines, including linguistics, archaeology, history of religions, biological anthropology, and politics. * Marc Vander Linden, Bournemouth University *
A scholarly labour of many decades, Demoule's erudite but accessible treatment of the Indo-Europeans is indispensable reading for anyone interested in the relationship between language, archaeology, and biological anthropology. It is also a shrewd analysis of the slippage between science and mysticism that plagues its topic, from the seventeenth century down to the present day, exposing the roots of a tenacious, often dark undercurrent of thought about the origins and destiny of 'the West'. * David Wengrow, University College London *
With this ambitious volume, Jean-Paul Demoule exposes and criticises the theoretical and methodological flaws inherent to the 'tree model,' which propounds that Indo-European languages and speakers dispersed and branched out from a unique point in space and time. An impressive display of historiographical knowledge stretching across several centuries and disciplines, including linguistics, archaeology, history of religions, biological anthropology, and politics. * Marc Vander Linden, Bournemouth University *
A scholarly labour of many decades, Demoule's erudite but accessible treatment of the Indo-Europeans is indispensable reading for anyone interested in the relationship between language, archaeology, and biological anthropology. It is also a shrewd analysis of the slippage between science and mysticism that plagues its topic, from the seventeenth century down to the present day, exposing the roots of a tenacious, often dark undercurrent of thought about the origins and destiny of 'the West'. * David Wengrow, University College London *

About Jean-Paul Demoule (Emeritus Professor of Archaeology, Emeritus Professor of Archaeology, Universite de Paris I Pantheon-Sorbonne)

Jean-Paul Demoule is Emeritus Professor of Archaeology at the Universite de Paris I Pantheon-Sorbonne, an honorary member of the Institut Universitaire de France, and a former president of the Institut national de recherches archeologiques preventives (Inrap; National Institute for Preventive Archeological Research).

Table of Contents

Preface The official Indo-European hypothesis: the 12 canonical theses OVERTURE From the Renaissance to the French Revolution 1. The search for a long-anticipated discovery The Indo-European golden legend Uncertain inventors The search for an anticipated discovery A recurring discovery Why was Leibniz unable to publish in German? Schizophrenic Europeans The slow secularization of the world India, an alternative myth FIRST MOVEMENT (FROM 1814 TO 1903) All is resolved! 2. The invention of comparative grammar The search for origins On the superiority of (Indo-) European languages Comparative grammar, a German science? Colonialism as an understanding of history August Schleicher and the botany of languages The young Turks of comparative grammar Other possible models so soon? 3. From India to Germania, the return of the wheeled cradle The Indian cradle An ephemeral Earthly Paradise The return of the homeland Those who refused to repatriate the homeland From texts to objects Imaginary communities The rise of archeological excavations More primitive Bathing, kissing and chastity Linguistics of absence The return to Germania Pan-Germanism and anti-Semitism Occultist beliefs The ambiguities of official linguistics 4. The invention of scientific racism God and the polygenists The art of measuring skulls From divine right to nation The terrors of the Count de Gobineau A science of man? Who are the French? On the origins of the Aryans Are the Prussians German? The three positions of French anthropologists on the Indo-European question Moderation among German anthropologists Does race exist? The Count and the Aryan Sex, fantasies and racisms The first symptoms of political racism The mismeasure of man SECOND MOVEMENT (FROM 1903 TO 1945) Crimes and errors 5. From comparative grammar to linguistics: a language of leaders? The ambiguities of Ferdinand de Saussure Antoine Meillet, chief and master A language of chiefs Do you speak a language of civilization? An instinct for conquest and a love of wide open spaces Linguistic sentiment? Meillet versus Schuchardt The triumph of structural linguistics And what if there never had been an Original People? 6. From Aryan Pan-Germanism to Nazism The methods of archeology Kossinna's law The Kossinnian Indo-German narrative A pre-eminently German discipline Erasing the memory of Kossinna Nazism, one of the possible horizons for the Aryans The Atlantis of the Far North Sects and secret societies Hitler himself was not a believer The rallying of archeologists SS against SA, and the pillaging of conquered lands International cowardice and complicity 7. A circling cradle Culture circles of the European Neolithic Uncertain European chronologies Childish, not Childeish! Regarding the superiority of declensions Skulls and words The dominance of the Nordic theory Eminently respectable universities Weaknesses in the Nordic hypothesis A die-hard Asiatic cradle Excavations in central Asia A return to (Eastern) Europe The Pontic steppes endure Marxism and archeology Marr, Stalin and linguistics 8. Excesses and crimes of racial theories Ordinary racism and institutional racism The anthropological dead-end Genetics to the rescue Eugenics and scientific charlatanism The dreams of German geneticists From skulls to crimes And what of France? Those who collaborated THIRD MOVEMENT (FROM 1945 TO THE 3RD MILLENNIUM) All is re-resolved! 9. The Return of the Aryan, pagan, extreme right (from 1945 to the present) A truly New Right? The magician prodromes A view from the (extreme) right From Gobineau to Konrad Lorenz A re-armed extreme right The limits of entryism Contemporary Aryan ideology A racial Que sais-je? The racist International Close collaborations 10. From racial anthropology to biological anthropology The twilight of the races Medals and survivals From skulls to red blood cells A truly new synthesis? We have rediscovered the Indo-Europeans! Racism by means of psychology and IQ 11. What archaeology tells us today The first Europeans The Neolithic revolution Sedentary hunter-gatherers The rise of chiefdoms What happened on the steppes? From the Copper Age to the Bronze Age New power networks From proto-history to history The search for the Indo-Europeans 12. Archeology: What if the Indo-Europeans had always been there? A nebulous autochthony Paleolithic continuity? 13. Did the Indo-Europeans really come from Turkey? Ex oriente lux A new hypothesis? The language of the original Homeland From Indo-European to Indo-Hittite? Part of the family tree of all the world's languages? Concerning the difficulties of classification The linguistic impacts of agriculture? The return of Trubetzkoy A non-verifiable model How can we rid ourselves of the initial brief An incomplete critical approach 14. Did the Indo-Europeans really come from the Black Sea Steppes? A (very) old hypothesis From Vilnius to Los Angeles Initial cautiousness The return of the steppes Feminism and invaders A new demonstration? A unified and coherent theory? The horse, of course and the chariot, naturally! Warrior invasions or a vicious circle? And what of genetics? 15. From prehistory to history: the rediscovered routes taken by the Indo-Europeans? How do we prove a migration? The coming of the Greeks An early Bronze Age arrival Tiles, gray ware and princely tombs The arrival of the Aryans in India? The world of the steppes and national issues Invisible migrations and Kulturkugel The mysteries of the Tocharians Our ancestors, the Celts Romans and Italics Hittites and Anatolians Their ancestors, the Germani Slavs or Germani? 16. Georges Dumezil, a French hero A sense of the epic The three functions The original texts The Dumezil affair Occupation and occultism One College, two Academies and a New Right Trifunctionality and Indo-Europeanness By excess and by default Heritages and heredities The unavoidable detour into archeology Other mythologists? Dumezil and the myths 17. Linguistic reconstructions and models in the 21st century Discovering original sounds? What exactly are we reconstructing? Of roots and words Thinking in trees The tree of all the world's languages An apple, a hat and a car Measuring the speed of language evolution From the tree to the network 18. Words and things of the Indo-Europeans The dead-ends of linguistic paleontology Demonstration by absence From words to meaning Regarding Indo-Europeanness A primordial poetry? From words to things, and creating the impression of reality Indo-European, or universal? How to always be right FINALE AND 2ND OVERTURE 19. Models, counter-models, ideologies and errors of logic: are there any alternatives? How languages change Invisible conquerors and secular empires Cultures and ethnic groups Archeological culture as Nation State? Lessons from the barbarians Languages and material cultures Languages without frontiers The inadequacy of trees No language is totally pure Mixes and interferences Substrates, adstrates and superstrates Pidgins and creoles Sprachbund and the Balkan laboratory Areal linguistics The tools of sociolinguistics Epilogue An alternative vision: the 12 Indo-European antitheses Appendices 1. Simplified chronological table of the main archaeological cultures and civilizations in Eurasia (from - 300 000 BC to the present). 2. Dates of emergence of the major Indo-European languages. 3. August Schleicher's tree of the Indo-European languages. 4. The development of the Indo-European languages according to Gamkrelidze and Ivanov (1985). 5. A map of some of the solutions of the Indo-European homeland problem proposed since 1960. 6. Map of the main archaeological cultures defined in the 1930s. 7. The Indo-European migrations, after Gustav Kossinna. 8. The early historical distribution of the main Indo-European speaking peoples. 9. The neolithization of Europe. 10. The spread of Indo-European languages, after Colin Renfrew. 11. Spread of Indo-European people, after Marija Gimbutas' theories. 12. Map of the Chalcolithic cultures in the 5th millennium BC. 13. Map of the Chalcolithic cultures in the 4th millennium BC. 14. Map of the Chalcolithic cultures in the 3rd millennium BC. 15. Map of the Chalcolithic cultures in the 2nd millennium BC. 16. Comparative trees of human genes and language families. 17. The Indian linguistic area, after Colin Masica 18. Relationships between the Indo-European languages, after Paul Heggarty 19. Relationships between the Indo-European languages, after Alfred Kroeber Bibliography Index

Additional information

NGR9780197683286
9780197683286
0197683282
The Indo-Europeans: Archaeology, Language, Race, and the Search for the Origins of the West by Jean-Paul Demoule (Emeritus Professor of Archaeology, Emeritus Professor of Archaeology, Universite de Paris I Pantheon-Sorbonne)
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Oxford University Press Inc
2023-08-10
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