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Who was Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy?
He was a thinker of startling power and originality; in my view an authentic genius of whom no age produces more than a handful.
—Page Smith (1984)
I have no doubt that one day—perhaps soon—the academic historians will discover that Rosenstock-Huessy was also one of the great pioneers in a new and significant interpretation of the history of mankind . . . His distrust of academic pretensions to total objectivity is shared today by the best scholars, as are his basic insights into the power of language, or speech, to draw people together into a common future . . . Rosenstock-Huessy was a prophet who, like many great prophets, failed in his own time, but whose time may now be coming.
—Harold J. Berman (1993)
Without Eugen, I would never have written The Star of Redemption_._
—Franz Rosenzweig, in a letter to Rudolf Hallo (1920)
Rosenstock-Huessy’s is a powerful and original mind. What is most important in his work is the understanding of the relevance of traditional values to a civilization still undergoing revolutionary transformations; and this contribution will gain rather than lose significance in the future..
—Lewis Mumford
I am a poet by vocation and, therefore, do not expect to learn much about Language from a writer of Prose. Yet, half of what I now know about the difference between Personal Speech, based upon Proper Names . . . words of command and obedience, summons and response, and the impersonal “objective” use of words as a communication code between individuals, I owe to Rosenstock-Huessy . . . I can only say that, by listening to Rosenstock-Huessy, I have been changed.
—W.H. Auden (1970)
Rosenstock-Huessy’s Speech and Reality is to sociology what Galileo’s “Discourse on Two New Sciences” is to modern mathematical physics because both books transform philosophy—natural in the case of Galileo and social in the case of ERH—into a positive science.
—James Eric Lane (2006)
Building upon the works of Augustine, Vico, Hamann, Herder, Goethe, and Saint-Simon, and working in tandem with Franz Rosenzweig, Rosenstock-Huessy has provided an urgent and timely program for the social or human sciences. It is based on the recognition that to be human is to be torn between the intersection of the inner and outer dimensions of space, and the ‘trajective’ and ‘prejective’ dimensions of time. This is what he calls the cross of reality.
Our different names, traditions, cultures, and institutions are the creative responses of founders and communities to past catastrophic events and processes. Rosenstock-Huessy calls upon us to pool and contribute to the spiritual resources that have been stored in the great treasure houses of languages and traditions, and create institutions for a genuine future peace. Thus his greatest work—the two volume Sociology, In the Cross of Reality_—is devoted to achieving what he calls the “Full Number of the Times.”_
—Wayne Cristaudo (2019)
And what is the Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy Fund?
The Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy Fund began in the early 1950s as a line item in the budget of Dartmouth College’s chaplaincy program, the Tucker Foundation, when the students recording Rosenstock-Huessy’s class lectures needed to raise money to buy tape stock. Former students went on to print a number of Rosenstock-Huessy’s books under the imprints “Beachhead” and “Four Wells,” and, after the Fund’s reinvention as a Vermont non-profit in 1976, through its publishing arm, Argo Books.
Over the years, the Fund has underwritten translations and publication of Rosenstock-Huessy’s works in France, Poland, Russia, and China. The Fund has also transcribed, published, and remastered the hundreds of hours of lectures which his students and friends had recorded, microfilmed and digitized his published and unpublished works, and created a digital archive of the letters and documents collected by the Rosenstock-Huessys.
Clinton C. Gardner founded Argo Books and ran it for almost twenty years, keeping Rosenstock-Huessy’s English-language works in print and issuing hitherto unpublished manuscripts as books; after Gardner’s retirement, Mark Huessy ran Argo for another twenty years as executive director of the Fund. (In Germany, the Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy Gesellschaft did similar work with the German-language works, and in Holland, the Respondeo Association published a number of translations into Dutch.) The Fund closed Argo Books in 2013, after finding another publisher to take on long-term responsibility for keeping Rosenstock-Huessy’s works in print: Wipf and Stock of Eugene, Oregon, who also publish Jacques Ellul and William Stringfellow.
In 2016, the Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy Literary Heirs generously agreed to make all the lecture recordings available for free download on the Fund’s website. (To see the selection of available lectures, click on the “Rosenstock-Huessy Live!” button in the navigation stack to the left, or here.) The Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy Literary Heirs ask that you consider making a donation to the Fund in lieu of payment for listening to or downloading the lecture audio and transcripts.
The Fund continues to serve the interest in Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy’s life and work. The Fund and its programs, including the ongoing expansion of this website, are entirely dependent on private contributions. Please consider making a tax-deductible donation to the Fund by clicking here or on one of the “donate” buttons on any page of this site.
The Fund offers travel grants toward the cost of traveling to Dartmouth’s Rauner Library to work with the archive materials onsite. Please contact the Fund here if you would like to be considered for a grant.
If you would like to connect with other people interested in Rosenstock-Huessy, you should consider joining the Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy Society of North America. The Society’s website offers a curated list of publications on Rosenstock-Huessy, including books, articles and essays, dissertations, and unpublished works; a compilation of articles about Rosenstock-Huessy from the Harvard Crimson; some twenty essays by Bill Cane, Wayne Cristaudo, Norman Fiering, and Peter Leithart; and links to online material by Robert Castle, Cristaudo, Douglas Floyd, Charles Howard Hartman, Leithart, Mike McDuffee, Scott Preston, and Donald Williamson, Jr. The members of the Society are a great resource for opinions and answers to questions on almost any aspect of Rosenstock-Huessy’s work. The German Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy Gesellschaft and the Dutch group RESPONDEO also offer items of interest, most of them in those languages.
Particularly valuable, for readers of German, is Gottfried Hofmann’s timeline of Rosenstock-Huessy’s life, built on information gleaned from the letters in the ERH Digital Archive and in the “Bethel” archive in Bielefeld. The timeline may be found here.
Authors and Publishers:
The Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy Fund will gladly consider posting information about new titles by, about, or related to Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy and his colleagues on this website. The Fund requests full bibliographic information as well as the URL of a cover picture (if available) and the URL for more detailed information about the publication. The Fund requests the courtesy of reciprocal links to www.erhfund.org. To contact the Fund, get in touch with us here.
Translators:
To promote the wider dissemination of his work, the Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy Literary Heirs have decided to allow open access to Rosenstock-Huessy’s published titles in German and English to all persons who wish to translate his works into languages other than German and English, and to all persons who wish to publish those translations. See more detail here.
Acting for the Rosenstock-Huessys’ legal heirs, the Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy Literary Heirs have decided to waive copyright in all letters, documents, and work, both published and unpublished, by Eugen and Margrit Rosenstock-Huessy. Authors and scholars are free to cite, quote, translate, and publish any and all letters, documents, and work by either Eugen or Margrit Rosenstock-Huessy. The Literary Heirs and the Huessy family request only that this freedom be exercised with fairness and decency.
The work of others, where it is included in works in which copyright has been waived, is unaffected by the Literary Heirs’ decision; permission to cite, quote, translate, and publish that work must still be sought from the current holders of copyright.
Margrit and Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy at Bob O’Brien’s farm in Tunbridge, VT in 1958.