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 Texto completo enlazado Entrevista a Nelson Manrique(Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, 2024-05-07) Drinot, PauloIn this interview, conducted in June 2023, historians Paulo Drinot and Nelson Manrique discuss the latter’s biography, historiographical production, political activism, university teaching and journalistic work. The interview opens a window on the life and work of one of the most important and influential intellectuals in Peru in the second half of the twentieth century and the beginning of the twenty-first century.Ítem Texto completo enlazado Sobre el discurso de la historia. Por una episteme del saber histórico(Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, 2021-12-01) Sevillano, FranciscoThis paper takes stock of the theoretical debate on the role of discourse in historical work. In the first part of the study, the notion of discourse is defined under the approach known as «linguistic turn» since the 1960s. In particular, the main features of this approach are described in light of the narrative and anti-realist assumptions of the «new philosophy of history» and their reassessment under the «experiential turn». The second part of the paper refutes these assumptions and argues about the cognitive value of history from its classical origins.Ítem Texto completo enlazado El Archivo Agrario: problema y posibilidad(Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, 2022-10-03) Adrianzén Ponce, CayetanaArchives provide the basis for national historical narratives, a premise for nation-building. However, Peru’s government administration problems extend to national archives: insufficient maintenance resources and inadequate service to the public. This creates a duality (i.e., enormous potential yet bad services), which is especially noticeable in the «Archivo Agrario». Collected in the 1970s by Peruvian researchers, the «Archivo Agrario» is unique in Latin America, given the variety and origin of the documents. In this essay, and using my research as an example, I explore the challenges and, more importantly, the opportunities afforded by this archive and the urgent need to transform it radically.Ítem Texto completo enlazado Garcilaso de la Vega: maestro de la Historia(Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, 2020-12-21) Kagan, Richard L.This article addresses the figure of Garcilaso de la Vega as a historian and the influence he exerted over the historiographic writing of his contemporaries, concretely the one of the general chronicler of the Indies, Pedro de Valencia. Thereby, this study will discuss the principal requirements Garcilaso considered when writing history: to tell the truth, to possess reliable sources and to transmit the voices of those who were born in the place one is writing about. These guides, in resonance with personal and political calculations, would eventually provoke Valencia to refrain himself from finishing his investigation of the history of the conquest of Chile.Ítem Texto completo enlazado Alberto Flores Galindo y su interpretación de la independencia peruana(Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, 2020-12-21) Peralta Ruiz, VíctorThis 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.