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libro
Publicado 2002
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ACASO SEAN DOS dimensiones las que hacen de una trayectoria intelectual un fruto fecundo y perdurable: los territorios y horizontes que ella explora, y las resonancias y ecos que esa obra deja en otros intelectuales. El trabajo historiográfico de Franklin Pease cumple largamente con ambas exigencias. Por ello, hace poco más de dos años Mariana Mould de Pease, su esposa, y un grupo de personas cercanas a él pensamos en la edición del libro que ahora tenemos la satisfacción de presentar. Compuesto por setenta y tres artículos, este volumen recoge las investigaciones de un conjunto de destacados colegas, alumnos y amigos suyos que, con rigor y creatividad, recorren los temas que más apasionaron a Pease y que dan forma y sustancia a su labor como historiador; ellos son las crónicas, los incas y la sociedad andina virreinal. Ahondan, pues, en las diferentes aristas desde las que Peas...
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artículo
Publicado 2019
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In Peru, the discovery of Machu Picchu has proved to be a bone of contention ever since Hiram Bingham first climbed the mountain and reached the Inca settlement. The dispute between Yale University and the Peruvian government over the possession of the archaeological artefacts which Bingham «temporarily» removed from Peru only soured the discussion further. The centennial of Bingham’s «discovery» saw both parties finally reach a settlement, as well as the publication of several books which either study these archaeological materials or explore Bingham’s life and work. And yet Bingham still remains an issue in Peru, the agreement notwithstanding. This love-hate relationship with the American explorer will only be solved once Peru comes to terms with its past, for what is at stake is not so much Bingham, but how Peru conceives and&n...
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artículo
Publicado 2019
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In Peru, the discovery of Machu Picchu has proved to be a bone of contention ever since Hiram Bingham first climbed the mountain and reached the Inca settlement. The dispute between Yale University and the Peruvian government over the possession of the archaeological artefacts which Bingham «temporarily» removed from Peru only soured the discussion further. The centennial of Bingham’s «discovery» saw both parties finally reach a settlement, as well as the publication of several books which either study these archaeological materials or explore Bingham’s life and work. And yet Bingham still remains an issue in Peru, the agreement notwithstanding. This love-hate relationship with the American explorer will only be solved once Peru comes to terms with its past, for what is at stake is not so much Bingham, but how Peru conceives and understands its history.
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artículo
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