https://rmdd.uchile.cl/index.php/CDH/issue/feed Cuadernos de Historia 2024-04-26T16:02:13+00:00 Sergio Grez c_histor@uchile.cl Open Journal Systems <p><em>Cuadernos de Historia </em>recibe para su publicación artículos originales de investigación de Historia, Arqueología, Antropología y otras disciplinas de las Ciencias Sociales y de las Humanidades, considerando la perspectiva histórica y procurando que estos contribuyan a difundir el debate metodológico y el intercambio académico bajo los más altos estándares de calidad y ética. Estos principios también se aplican en todas las etapas del proceso de recepción, evaluación y edición. La revista también publica fuentes poco conocidas que sean relevantes para la investigación, además de reseñas de libros aparecidos en los dos años anteriores a su envío al equipo editorial. La publicación no tendrá cargos para el/la o los/as autores/as.</p> https://rmdd.uchile.cl/index.php/CDH/article/view/74489 Álvaro Jara Hantke. Notes from an unrevealed history, 1923-1948. 2024-04-26T13:40:28+00:00 Mario Andrés González Inostroza marioandresgonzalez82@gmail.com The following article addresses the closest family, cultural and political environment that the historian Álvaro Jara lived from his childhood to his early youth. It is argued that Jara experienced in these contexts a strong relationship, direct and indirect, in the order of culture and politics that allowed him to incorporate a solid cultural and social capital. The impregnation of an atmosphere of rupture would make it easier for him to undertake new horizons in his later intellectual and historiographical development. 2024-04-26T00:00:00+00:00 Copyright (c) 2024 Cuadernos de Historia https://rmdd.uchile.cl/index.php/CDH/article/view/74490 Hispani qui in Italia sunt. Hispanic presence in Italy through epigraphy (1st century BC - 5th century AD) 2024-04-26T14:24:19+00:00 José Ortiz Córdoba joseortiz@ugr.es We study the epigraphic documentation generated by those Hispanics who moved to Italy between the 1st century BC and the 5th century AD. To compile this information we have reviewed the CIL indexes relating to Italy and Rome, as well as the data collected in specialised publications and databases, selecting all those inscriptions that have a Hispanic origin. This documentation forms the basis of the corresponding historical study, which analyses the origin and destination centres of these Hispanics, as well as the reasons for their movements. We also study their professions and the activity they carried out in their new places of residence. 2024-04-26T00:00:00+00:00 Copyright (c) 2024 Cuadernos de Historia https://rmdd.uchile.cl/index.php/CDH/article/view/74491 José Venturelli, pioneer in Chile-China relations: from cultural diplomacy to Non-State actor 2024-04-26T14:44:26+00:00 Mónica Ahumada Figueroa monica.ahumada@usach.cl Chile and China’s diplomatic relations converged within the figure of José Venturelli, who, in a pioneering manner, saw China as a model to follow. This fact contains relevant aspects since his figure, as an artist and intellectual, was controversial and invisibilized by virtue of his radical commitment to the Asian country. This article attempts to inquire about his trajectory as a muralist-painter; his radical compromise with the People’s Republic of China from the conceptual approach of cultural diplomacy; his political contacts with the Communist Party, and his role as a non-state actor with residences in Chile, China, Cuba and Sweden. The analysis is addressed from the perspective of cultural diplomacy and non-State actors, who intervene in constructing new spaces for discussion. 2024-04-26T00:00:00+00:00 Copyright (c) 2024 Cuadernos de Historia https://rmdd.uchile.cl/index.php/CDH/article/view/74492 “It is necessary for women to be self-conscious.” An analysis of the rationalist ideology on women from the Boletín de la Escuela Moderna (1901-1909) 2024-04-26T15:04:08+00:00 Estefanía Fernández Antón estefania.fernandez@unir.net Miriam Sonlleva Velasco miriam.sonlleva@uva.es The aim of the article is: to analyze her discourse about women in the Boletín de la Escuela Moderna. To do this, the issues published between 1901 and 1909 are examined. These are kept at the Fundación Ferrer i Guàrdia and at the Historical Archive of Barcelona (Spain). The documentary analysis reveals that the rationalist discourse includes two spheres: public and private. Within the private space, women’s freedom is conditioned by marriage and maternity. Rationalism seeks female emancipation through the free union between the sexes. Likewise, it is committed to a conscious, voluntary maternity and protected by public powers. In the public sphere, rationalist education and salaried work are key to the social liberation of women. However, the discourse proves ineffective in enabling women to break free from their biological and social destiny. 2024-04-26T00:00:00+00:00 Copyright (c) 2024 Cuadernos de Historia https://rmdd.uchile.cl/index.php/CDH/article/view/74493 Women, family and property. Economic management of family wealth by female heads of household. Melipilla (Chile), 1810-1837 2024-04-26T15:41:43+00:00 Andrea Armijo Reyes aarmijo@uct.cl Igor Goicovic Donoso igor.goicovic@usach.cl The aim of this article is to analyze the family wealth management strategies deployed by women around Melipilla (Chile) during the 1810-1837 period. We have been able to establish that this period was particularly complex in the lives of both popular and elite families, due to the contingencies imposed by the War of Independence and the civil conflicts associated with the construction of the State. Despite this, women who found themselves alone, due to the recruitment, escape or imprisonment of their husbands, fathers, or sons, managed to carry out different initiatives of wealth management, such as the purchase, sale and lease of land, houses and belongings, as well as the development of small productive and commercial enterprises. This work was based on notarial and judicial sources, contained in the National Historical Archive. 2024-04-26T00:00:00+00:00 Copyright (c) 2024 Cuadernos de Historia