Histórica

URI permanente para esta comunidadhttp://54.81.141.168/handle/123456789/175373

ISSN: 0252-8894
e-ISSN: 2223-375X

Fundada en 1977, Histórica es la revista semestral de la sección de Historia del Departamento de Humanidades de la Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú (PUCP). Publica trabajos de investigación, originales e inéditos, escritos en español, sobre la historia del Perú, la historia latinoamericana, de interés para el Perú y de teoría de la historia. Comprende tres secciones: artículos, notas y reseñas de libros.

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  • Ítem
    Alberto Flores Galindo y su interpretación de la independencia peruana
    (Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, 2020-12-21) Peralta Ruiz, Víctor
    This paper focuses on the study of the three interpretative paths that historian Alberto Flores Galindo developed in his analysis of Peruvian independence. It is argued that the double sensibility, academic and political, of this historian surfaced in his approach to issues such as the revolution of Tupac Amaru II, the Creole complicity in sustaining a counterrevolution of independence marked by social discrimination and the destruction of the project of an aristocratic and popular Andean utopia. Throughout this analysis, it is shown that the methodological trajectory of this historian was marked by the academic debates raised by the commemoration of the sesquicentennial of independence but also by the acute crisis experienced by the country in its process of democratic transition that led him to design and defend a leftist revolutionary option. Finally, it will be discussed to what extent the current historiographical knowledge on the emancipatory conjuncture reviews his interpretative essays.
  • Ítem
    Guerra internacional, revolución y dictadura: los partidos parlamentarios y la política peruana entre 1865 y 1867
    (Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. Fondo Editorial, 2018) Peralta Ruiz, Víctor
    This article studies the political behavior of the first Peruvian parliamentary parties between the constitutional government of General Juan Antonio Pezet and the Dictatorship of General Mariano Ignacio Prado. I argue that the revolutionary option in 1865 and 1867 was conditioned by the way the government conducted its diplomatic conflict with Spain, in the first case, and by how the dictatorship made use of the political gains of the naval conflict of May 2 1866, in the second. That is to say, unlike other countries involved in the Spanish diplomatic question, international war conditioned the Peruvian political system. In particular, international war becomes an explanatory factor for the main parliamentary parties’ coup intentions, having felt circumstantially excluded by the executive office.