The Tarim mummies : ancient China and the mystery of the earliest peoples from the West

by J. P. Mallory

Other authorsVictor H. Mair
Paper Book, 2008

Status

Available

Call number

NF 8850 M255

Collection

Publication

London : Thames & Hudson, 2008.

Description

How did tartan-wearing Indo-Europeans come to be in Asia 2,000 years beforeWest and East admitted each other's existence? Describing their discovery of the Tarim Mummies and revealing the attempts of scientists to determine their ethnic identity, the authors examine all the evidence connected with the mummies, including textiles and languages of the Tarim region, in this acclaimed tour-de-force of scholarship.

User reviews

LibraryThing member DinadansFriend
The archaeology of the Tarim basin as of 2004. The succession of cultures and their probable ethnic components is interesting, and a bit of a rethink is required for some racial theories.
LibraryThing member pbjwelch
The Tarim Mummies is an excellent book for anyone travelling to China's western regions in so many regards--its short introductions and sidebars to a variety of topics (language, archaeology, history, explorers, migrations, art history, textiles, animal husbandry) are excellent and make this book
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far more readable than many available 'introductions' to the region. Yes, the focus is on the Tarim mummies (of which there are/were thousands), but in addressing the question of who they were, one first has to understand the geology, history (human and non-), languages, cultures of the region, etc. And so regardless of your actual interest in mummies, if you're looking for a good introduction to Xinjiang, the ancient Silk Road, and related topics, grab this book. In fact, I've recommended it to many friends as a "very out-of-the-ordinary travel guide" to western China. It's well-written (OK, some parts, particularly the linguistics chapter I admit to finding a bit dry--more on this below), but the authors little insertions of dry humour humanize the topic and text and when you finish the last page, you will be delightfully well-informed of this fascinating part of China and its many histories.

If you're interested in the ancient languages of Central Asia/Western China, the former Russian steppes and beyond, this is also an excellent introduction, and although I'm personally less interested in this area, each time I read this book I do hover in these sections a little longer. It's a well organized and basic introduction to both the languages of the region and some of the daunting linguistic questions specialists are still struggling over. I hope search engines turn up this book for those searching for information on the topic; hopefully the subtitle "Ancient China and the Mystery of the Earliest Peoples from the West" highlights the breadth of information covered in the text.

And of course, if you're interested in mummies--go no further.
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LibraryThing member Rudolf
Lavishly illustrated and well-researched, this could have been an excellent introduction to the archaeology of the Tarim Basin (or eastern Central Asia, present-day Turkestan/Xinjiang). Chapters 1-3 are particularly worth reading for those interested in ancient Central Asia and so-called Silk Road
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cultures. But what starts off as a book for a general audience, oftentimes seems directed more at specialists. The book is moreover trying to do too much, and in a rather disjointed manner as different chapters are devoted to specific disciplines (archaeology, textile studies linguistics, genetics, and even craniology) in order to solve, step-by-step, ‘the mystery’ of the origin and identity of the Tarim mummies.

Now the origin of the mummies discovered in the Tarim Basin is not a mystery at all: they are from the Tarim Basin. As they were not mummified on purpose by a specific culture (like for instance ancient the Egyptian mummies were), but were preserved as a result of natural circumstances, the Tarim mummies represent several peoples and cultures in different regions of eastern Central Asia over a period of 2,500 years. But the authors are not really interested in these cultures. In their repeated description of the region as ‘in between’ East and West, they seem to deny the Tarim a culture, or cultures, of its own. For what they are primarily interested in, is the presumed ancestry of the mummies, and their professed aim is to prove that these ancestors were ‘Europeans’. Not only are they unaware of the fact that ‘Europe’ is a cultural construct that has no relevance whatsoever for premodern Eurasian history (in fact, when speaking of ‘Europe’ they often mean the western Eurasia steppes north of the Caspian and Black Sea), their efforts are rooted in some alarming notions of racial difference and ethnic purity. They distinguish sharply between the representatives of a ‘Caucasoid’ (or ‘Europoid’) and ‘Mongoloid’ race among the mummies, even if the alleged representatives of these groups were found in the same cemetery. DNA research may have been the flavor of the month in ancient migration studies over the past decades (and in itself is a respectable field), but what is disturbing, is that Mallory and Mair constantly link ‘race’ to culture and even language. As this book was published in 2000, its racialism is both terribly outdated (to say the least) and a foreshadowing of the return of racial thinking in our own time.

Another problem with this book, is that it repeatedly equates ancient and modern China, and thereby seems to endorse the claims of the present Chinese regime that Xinjiang has been part of China since time immemorial. The book’s title is symptomatic. It both locates the Tarim Basin incorrectly in ‘Ancient China’ and tendentiously identifies its earliest inhabitants as ‘peoples from the west’.
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Language

Original publication date

2000

Physical description

26 cm

ISBN

9780500283721
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