Of manuscript conspirator to revolutionary form. "The Diario Secreto de Lima" and the dissident political speech in the context of the independence of America
Abstract
Between the context of the Spanish crisis of 1808 and the impact of the formation of Councils of Government in America broke the secret diary of Lima in 1811. Promoted by Fernando López Aldana in the capital of the administration of Abascal in the Peru, the form went from being a manuscript conspirator a printed revolutionary. In that perspective, this research is aimed at analysis of dissident political discourse of the secret diary at the juncture of the independence and starting from four thematic focal points: the critique of despotism, adherence to the revolutionaries of Buenos Aires, the recurrence to the populace and the incidence for the participation of the fair sex at that juncture of war and revolution.
Downloads
Article download
License
In order to support the global exchange of knowledge, the journal Historia y Comunicación Social is allowing unrestricted access to its content as from its publication in this electronic edition, and as such it is an open-access journal. The originals published in this journal are the property of the Complutense University of Madrid and any reproduction thereof in full or in part must cite the source. All content is distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 use and distribution licence (CC BY 4.0). This circumstance must be expressly stated in these terms where necessary. You can view the summary and the complete legal text of the licence.