Abstract
389 The ideas presented in this brief paper were first presented in the three graduate seminars that Edward Said and I gave on the broad subject of historicism and interpretation at Columbia University. I am grateful to him for his responses there and also to Carol Rovane and James Miller for their comments on a draft of this paper. 1. See EdwardW. Said, Beginnings: Intention andMethod (1975; New York, 1997); hereafter abbreviatedB. The distinction is made throughout the work, but it is most explicit in the preface and chapter 1. For Vico, see his The New Science, trans. T. G. Bergin andM. H. Fisch (Ithaca, N.Y., 1988). The distinction is made in many parts of the book; see p. 103, just to give one good instance of it. Interpreting a Distinction
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