Sandra Rudnick Luft is Professor of Humanities at San Francisco State University.
"This book by Sandra Rudnick Luft, twenty years in the making, is a personal yet rigorous reading of Gianbattista Vico's New Science, put forth by a scholar who has clearly lived with (and, I think, loved) this text for a long time. . . . Luft recovers the strangeness of the New Science by interpreting its myth of origins, in which she sees a human defined not by knowing but by an act of creating through language that in no way depends on a prior subjectivity, in the light of the meaning of the Hebrew davar. . . . For those open to alchemical readings, this is a provocative, even exciting book. . . . Throughout she seeks not to explain where Vico's ideas came from but rather to uncover their radical potential, a potential that perhaps only becomes apparent in the wake of later, historically unrelated writings. Intellectual historians might consider how such an approach could enrich our own readings of complex literary and philosophical texts."—Carol Quillen, American Historical Reivew, February 2005 "This idiosyncratic book is destined not only to keep alive the interest in Vico among readers unable to approach him in the original but also to stimulate inquiries into the problematic connection of the New Science to Jewish studies."—Gustavo Costa, Renaissance Quarterly, Fall 2004 "Luft shows that Vico knew nothing of rabbinic interpretations of Genesis and did not anticipate postmodernism; it is through rabbinic exegetes and postmodernist thinkers like Nietzsche, Heidegger, Gadamer, Foucault, and Derrida that one is best able to understand the viewpoint at which Vico arrived and which all his "modernist" interpreters (many discussed in this book) have failed to grasp. Dense but provocative."—Choice, March 2004 "This is a deep, learned, and original (but in no way idiosyncratic) reading of Vico's magnificently flawed classic, The New Science. It is also a heroic work, respectfully but adamantly set against the grain of the currently dominant trend in Vico interpretation which seeks to make of him a man of our time rather than of his own. Sandra Luft combines erudition with hermeneutic tact in her reading of Vico's ideas about language, history, and humanism. And her expository style is a treat: precise, passionate, illuminating. A scholar's feast!"—Hayden White, University Professor of the History of Consciousness, University of California, Professor of Comparative Literature, Stanford University "Here is a new, captivating, and deeply learned reading of Vico's New Science. Relying on some postmodern as well as rabbinical insights, Luft finds in Vico's work a vindication of poetic creativity outside the parameters of traditional humanist and theological interpretations focused on subjective agency. Leaving behind the modern subject and its so-called 'end,' Vico emerges as the champion of a transformative praxis appropriate for our time."—Fred Dallmayr, Notre Dame "This is an important book, one which will redirect the readings of Vico. The thinker Luft describes is simply more interesting than the one presented by others—more original, more radical, more all the things Vico claimed to be."—Hans Kellner, North Carolina State University