Iran and the Aryan myth*
David Motadel
https://www.davidmotadel.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/MotadelAryans.pdf
Few terms
in modern history have developed a similar vigour and significance as
the word
‘Aryan’. From the mid-nineteenth century onwards, the term became a
strong
political concept which had a notable impact on the construction of ethnic
and
national identities in both the European and the non-European world. This
chapter
presents an account of the origins, evolution and politicisation of the term
‘Aryan’
in modern Europe, concluding with a brief sketch of its significance in the
non-European
world, specifically in Iran, since the late nineteenth century. The
purpose
of the article is to rethink the often underestimated role that Iran played
in the
history of myths about the ‘Aryan’, both in European debates and in Iranian
nationalist
discourse.1
The
history of the term ‘Aryan’ can be seen as a series of conceptualisations and
re-conceptualisations. This chapter endeavours to draw attention
to the
actual change and variation in the meaning of the expression over
time,2
exploring the rediscovery of the ancient term
by European scholars
of the
late eighteenth century, its introduction into historical literature and
linguistics
in the early nineteenth century, and the subsequent conceptualising
of
‘Aryans’ as an Indo-European people (I); the re-conceptualising of ‘Aryans’
as an
Indo-European race (II); the evolution and abstraction of the term
‘Aryan’
within European race theories, and its politicisation and popularisation in the
late nineteenth century (III); and the political instrumentalisation,
particularly
discourses about the ‘Aryan’ in Nazi Germany (IV).
I
conclude with an examination of the reception of European ideas about the
‘Aryan’
in the non-European world, specifically its reception by Iranian nationalists
(V). The century-long terminological evolution of the term did result in a
diversification of meaning. (...) click the link above to continue reading...

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