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A version of this paper was originally written for a plenary session about "The Futures of Ethnography" at the 1998 EASA conference in Frankfurt/Main. In the preparation of the paper, I sent out some questions to my former fellow researchers by e-mail. I thank Douglas Anthony, Jan-Patrick Heiß, Alaine Hutson, Matthias Krings, and Brian Larkin for their answers.
This paper was presented at the workshop “Goods, Languages, and Cultures along the Silk Road” at Goethe University Frankfurt am Main, October 18 and 19, 2019. While many contributions to the workshop focused on recent developments in China’s current “New Silk Road” politics, on forms of communication, and on contemporary exchange of goods and ideas across so-called Silk Road countries in the Caucasus and Central Asia and with China, this short essay focuses on the history of the so-called Silk Road as an important transport connection. Although what is now called the “Silk Road” was not a pure East-West binary in antiquity but rather developed into a network that also led to the South and North, the focus here will be on describing the East-West connection.
I will start with a few brief remarks on the origins of the connection referred to as the Silk Road and will then introduce the different great empires that shaped this connection between antiquity and the Middle Ages through military campaigns and by using it as a trading route and network. But the Silk Road was by no means only of economic and military importance. Its significance for the exchange and dissemination of religions should also be mentioned. This paper does not detail the importance of the numerous individual religions in the area of the Silk Road but discusses the phenomenon of the spread of religions and the loss of some of their own distinguishing characteristics in this spread, a phenomenon that could be described as a “unity of opposites” (coincidentia oppositorum). Finally, the essay asks who, in the face of the regular replacement of powers, held sovereignty over the transport connection: the subject (in the form of the empires) or the object (in the form of the road).
Who were the main protagonists of and along the Silk Road in the course of history? Who were the people who became the great powers of the ancient Silk Road, building up the material route, governing parts of it, and organizing trade and relationships from the far East to the extreme West of the Eurasian continent?
Die vorliegende Fallstudie zu den Anciens Combattants in Diébougou ist das Ergebnis einer Lehrforschung der Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität, Frankfurt am Main, Institut für Historische Ethnologie, die vom 24. August 2001 bis zum 16. Dezember 2001 unter der Leitung von Prof. Carola Lentz, und der Betreuung durch Dr. Katja Werthmann, Dr. Richard Kuba sowie in Kooperation mit der Universität von Ouagadougou (Département d’Histoire et d’Archéologie) in Burkina Faso stattfand. Allen genannten Personen und Institutionen sei an dieser Stelle ausdrücklich gedankt. Die Fallstudie reichte ich im Februar 2004 als Magister-Abschlussarbeit am Fachbereich Geschichtswissenschaften (Historische Ethnologie) der Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität, Frankfurt am Main, bei Prof. Carola Lentz und Prof. Karl-Heinz Kohl ein. Der Großteil der ursprünglich im Anhang der Magisterarbeit enthaltenen Dokumente, Karten und Photos wurde ausgelagert, und der Text erfuhr eine geringfügige Überarbeitung. Im Anschluss an einen vierwöchigen Dioula-Sprachkurs in Bobo-Dioulasso folgte die dreimonatige Erhebungsphase in Diébougou, sowohl Hauptort (chef-lieu) der Provinz Bougouriba im Südwesten Burkina Fasos, Markt- als auch Verwaltungszentrum mit 11 637 Einwohnern (siehe http://www.ambf.bf/f_mairies.html). Interethnische Beziehungen, Siedlungsgeschichte und Bodenrecht waren die übergeordneten Themen des ethnologischen Teilprojekts A9 des Sonderforschungsbereichs 268 "Kulturentwicklung und Sprachgeschichte im Naturraum Westafrikanische Savanne" der Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität, der die Durchführung der Lehrforschung finanziell unterstützte, und dem ich gleichsam danken möchte.
Adam Smith formulated a fundamental critique of economic growth in his philosophical oeuvre The Theory of Moral Sentiments, published in the year 1759. What might seem to be irony concerning the history of ideas – irony in the sense of the exclamation “he of all people” – is actually not irony at all. Smith wrote a substantial review of Rousseau’s Second Discourse, referring to Rousseau’s critique of commercial society. Additionally, one of the principal topics of Rousseau’s critique, the deformation of fundamental needs to passions in service of the satisfaction of self-love, is a major subject in Smith’s Theory of Moral Sentiments. But whereas Rousseau suggests egalitarian politics, Smith proposes individual stoicism: “In ease of body and peace of mind, all the different ranks of life are nearly upon a level, and the beggar, who suns himself by the side of the highway, possesses that security which kings are fighting for.” Nevertheless, both authors and analysts of pre-capitalist society identify the difference between fundamental needs and desires as having been born out of comparison as both a source of unhappiness and of economic development.