List of Importers – Garments Sector Company Name Address Contact

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

List of Importers – Garments Sector Company Name Address Contact List of importers – Garments sector Web site Company Name Address Contact Position Phone Number email ANASTASSIA Manuel Montt 2541 - Evelyn Valencia Commercial 56 9 7399 9520 Nuñoa Manager [email protected] www.anastassiamoda.cl COMERCIAL GIOVO El Tototal 850 - Quilicura Gilda Giovo Commercial 56 2 2925 4300 (LINEATRE) Manager [email protected] www.lineatre.cl CORONA Arturo Prat 578 - Santiago Lucia Moliterno Product 56 2 2373 7000 Manager [email protected] www.corona.cl DAFITI (BigFoot Chile Los Militares 5890, of 404 Product SPA) - Las Condes Sebastian Venegas Manager - 56 2 2656 9840 sebastian.venegas@dafiti Garment .cl www.dafiti.cl DISTRIBUIDORA IVO Av. Manuel Montt 2054 - Zvonimir Vodanovic Owner 56 2 2204 9806 zvonko@distribuidoraivo. (JENNIE WALKER) Providencia cl www.jenniewalker.cl EUROFASHION Calle San Ignacio 700 - Francisca Topali Product 56 2 2387 2355 carolina.undurraga@cen Quilicura Manager cosud.cl www.eurofashion.cl Garment FALABELLA Rosas 1665 - Santiago Matías Olivos Product 56 2 2380 2105 Manager [email protected] www.falabella.cl Panamericana Norte 5951 Deputy FASHION'S PARK S.A. - Conchalí Rocio Vega Commercial 56 2 2763 8378 rocio.vega@fashionspark Manager .com www.fashionspark.com FBO Italy Bombero Adolfo Ossa Fabiola Bustos Owner 56 9 9-6569 1776 1017 - Santiago [email protected] www.fboitaly.cl FEROUCH Lincoyán 9825 - Quilicura Abraham Alamo General 56 2 2731 3120 Manager [email protected] www.ferouch.cl GIVE LTDA. Calle Maestra Lidia Torres Nicolás Param General 56 2 2735 5662 [email protected] / 252 - Recoleta Manager [email protected] www.give.cl INDUSTRIA TEXTIL Avenida Presidente Imports TALINAY LTDA. Eduardo Frei Montalva Paola Piccinini Manager 56 2 2730 1006 5399 - Conchalí [email protected] www.efesis.cl ITALMOD Av. Domingo Santa María Loreto Ramírez Commercial 56 2 3265 4866 2365 - Independencia Manager [email protected] www.italmod.cl LA POLAR Pdte Eduardo Frei Andrea Schrebler Product 56 2 2383 3085 Montalva 520 - Renca Manager [email protected] www.lapolar.cl Volcán Tronador 394 Supply Chain LIMONADA Parque Industrial Lo Boza Pablo Ochoa Manager 56 2 2346 0532 - Pudahuel [email protected] www.limonada.cl LOLITA POCKET Portal de La Dehesa, local Jessica Hoppmann Owner 56 9 9799 2942 [email protected] 2059 - Lo Barnechea m www.lpk.cl MANZANO & CIA Infante 0400 - Quilpué Alberto Manzano General 56 32 292 0777 LTDA. - FICCUS KIDS Manager [email protected] www.ficcus.cl Avenida Boulevard Commercial MODELLA GROUP Aeropuerto Sur 9624 - Andrea Bago Manager 56 2 2828 4104 andrea.bago@modellagr Pudahuel oup.com www.modellagroup.com Avda Kennedy 9001 Piso 4 Garment PARIS (CENCOSUD) - Las Condes Ximena Montenegro Product 56 2 2336 7000 ximena.montenegro@pa Manager ris.cl www.paris.cl PILLIN Av. Colo Colo 241 - Alvaro Jadue Owner 56 2 2674 2300 Quilicura [email protected] www.pillin.cl PRIVILEGE Colorado 640 - Quilicura Verónica Cheyre Import Manager 56 2 2690 9500 [email protected] www.privilege.cl Mall Plaza Norte, Av. RIPLEY (COMERCIAL Americo Vespucio 1737 Woman garment 56 2 2690 1000 ext ECSA) Edificio Integramedica, Pamela Rojas buyer 5811 Piso 7 - Huechuraba [email protected] www.ripley.cl Luis Pasteur 6650, Casa Commercial ROMORS Pasteur, Local 2. – Agustín Romero Manager 56 9 9653 9167 agustinromero@romors. Vitacura cl www.romors.cl SINGOLARE Seminario 615 - Daniela Castro Commercial 56 2 2635 4828 Providencia Manager [email protected] www.singolare.cl Av. Eduardo Frei Montalva TEXORA 9931 - Quilicura Manola Cruz Design Manager 56 2 2352 4039 [email protected] www.texora.cl TEXTIL BURGER Y CIA Bascuñan Guerrero 888 - Josefa Burger Commercial 56 2 2682 2335 josefa.burger@cannibal. LTDA Santiago Manager cl www.cannibal.cl THERAPY Avenida Las Tranqueras Maria Isabel Gil Owner 56 2 2201 6095 1534 - Vitacura [email protected] www.therapy-store.cl Vicuña Mackenna 3600 - Maria Angel Products TRICOT Santiago Mardones Manager - 56 2 2350 3634 Womenswear [email protected] www.tricot.cl Pdte Eduardo Frei Textile and WALMART CHILE Montalva 8301 - Quilicura Juan Monsalve Garment 56 2 2200 5743 juan.monsalve@walmart Manager .com www.walmart.com.
Recommended publications
  • Chile -- Britannica Online Encyclopedia
    Chile -- Britannica Online Encyclopedia https://www.britannica.com/print/article/111326 Chile History Precolonial period At the time of the Spanish conquest of Chile in the mid-16th century, at least 500,000 Indians inhabited the region. Nearly all of the scattered tribes were related in race and language, but they lacked any central governmental organization. The groups in northern Chile lived by fishing and by farming in the oases. In the 15th century they fell under the influence of expanding civilizations from Peru, first the Chincha and then the Quechua, who formed part of the extensive Inca empire. Those invaders also tried unsuccessfully to conquer central and southern Chile. The Araucanian Indian groups were dispersed throughout southern Chile. These mobile peoples lived in family clusters and small villages. A few engaged in subsistence agriculture, but most thrived from hunting, gathering, fishing, trading, and warring. The Araucanians resisted the Spanish as they had the Incas, but fighting and disease reduced their numbers by two-thirds during the first century after the Europeans arrived. The Spanish conquest of Chile began in 1536–37, when forces under Diego de Almagro, associate and subsequent rival of Francisco Pizarro, invaded the region as far south as the Maule River in search of an “Otro Peru” (“Another Peru”). Finding neither a high civilization nor gold, the Spaniards decided to return immediately to Peru. The discouraging reports brought back by Almagro’s men forestalled further attempts at conquest until 1540–41, when Pizarro, after the death of Almagro, granted Pedro de Valdivia license to conquer and colonize the area.
    [Show full text]
  • 150 Years of the Province of Chile (1853-2003)
    Vincentiana Volume 48 Number 3 Vol. 48, No. 3 Article 9 5-2004 150 Years of the Province of Chile (1853-2003) David Herrera Henriquez C.M. Follow this and additional works at: https://via.library.depaul.edu/vincentiana Part of the Catholic Studies Commons, Comparative Methodologies and Theories Commons, History of Christianity Commons, Liturgy and Worship Commons, and the Religious Thought, Theology and Philosophy of Religion Commons Recommended Citation Herrera Henriquez, David C.M. (2004) "150 Years of the Province of Chile (1853-2003)," Vincentiana: Vol. 48 : No. 3 , Article 9. Available at: https://via.library.depaul.edu/vincentiana/vol48/iss3/9 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Vincentian Journals and Publications at Via Sapientiae. It has been accepted for inclusion in Vincentiana by an authorized editor of Via Sapientiae. For more information, please contact [email protected]. VINCENTIANA 6-2005 - FRANCESE November 24, 2005 − 1ª BOZZA Vincentiana, novembre-décembre 2005 150 Years of the Province of Chile (1853-2003) 1 by David Herrera Henrı´quez,C.M. Province of Chile On 17 November 1853, the Magallanes weighed anchor at the French port of Bordeaux, capital of Aquitaine, at the mouth of the Garonne. Among the ship’s passengers were two Vincentian priests, Felix Claude Vence and Raphael Dominique Sillere, along with Brother Joseph Marie Liegeois. These confreres were traveling with 30 Daughters of Charity, whose white cornettes were whipped about by the wind blowing over the water. Sr. Marie Bricquet was the Visitatrix, and Srs. Stephanie Pirot, Josephine Gavary and Louise Panes were the Sister Servants.
    [Show full text]
  • Urban Ethnicity in Santiago De Chile Mapuche Migration and Urban Space
    Urban Ethnicity in Santiago de Chile Mapuche Migration and Urban Space vorgelegt von Walter Alejandro Imilan Ojeda Von der Fakultät VI - Planen Bauen Umwelt der Technischen Universität Berlin zur Erlangung des akademischen Grades Doktor der Ingenieurwissenschaften Dr.-Ing. genehmigte Dissertation Promotionsausschuss: Vorsitzender: Prof. Dr. -Ing. Johannes Cramer Berichter: Prof. Dr.-Ing. Peter Herrle Berichter: Prof. Dr. phil. Jürgen Golte Tag der wissenschaftlichen Aussprache: 18.12.2008 Berlin 2009 D 83 Acknowledgements This work is the result of a long process that I could not have gone through without the support of many people and institutions. Friends and colleagues in Santiago, Europe and Berlin encouraged me in the beginning and throughout the entire process. A complete account would be endless, but I must specifically thank the Programme Alßan, which provided me with financial means through a scholarship (Alßan Scholarship Nº E04D045096CL). I owe special gratitude to Prof. Dr. Peter Herrle at the Habitat-Unit of Technische Universität Berlin, who believed in my research project and supported me in the last five years. I am really thankful also to my second adviser, Prof. Dr. Jürgen Golte at the Lateinamerika-Institut (LAI) of the Freie Universität Berlin, who enthusiastically accepted to support me and to evaluate my work. I also owe thanks to the protagonists of this work, the people who shared their stories with me. I want especially to thank to Ana Millaleo, Paul Paillafil, Manuel Lincovil, Jano Weichafe, Jeannette Cuiquiño, Angelina Huainopan, María Nahuelhuel, Omar Carrera, Marcela Lincovil, Andrés Millaleo, Soledad Tinao, Eugenio Paillalef, Eusebio Huechuñir, Julio Llancavil, Juan Huenuvil, Rosario Huenuvil, Ambrosio Ranimán, Mauricio Ñanco, the members of Wechekeche ñi Trawün, Lelfünche and CONAPAN.
    [Show full text]
  • The Structure of Political Conflict: Kinship Networks and Political Alignments in the Civil Wars of Nineteenth-Century Chile
    THE STRUCTURE OF POLITICAL CONFLICT: KINSHIP NETWORKS AND POLITICAL ALIGNMENTS IN THE CIVIL WARS OF NINETEENTH-CENTURY CHILE Naim Bro This dissertation is submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Department of Sociology St Catharine’s College University of Cambridge July 2019 1 This thesis is the result of my own work and includes nothing which is the outcome of work done in collaboration except as declared in the Preface and specified in the text. It is not substantially the same as any that I have submitted, or, is being concurrently submitted for a degree or diploma or other qualification at the University of Cambridge or any other University or similar institution except as declared in the Preface and specified in the text. I further state that no substantial part of my thesis has already been submitted, or, is being concurrently submitted for any such degree, diploma or other qualification at the University of Cambridge or any other University or similar institution except as declared in the Preface and specified in the text. It does not exceed the prescribed word limit for the relevant Degree Committee. 2 THE STRUCTURE OF POLITICAL CONFLICT: KINSHIP NETWORKS AND POLITICAL ALIGNMENTS IN THE CIVIL WARS OF NINETEENTH-CENTURY CHILE Naim Bro Abstract Based on a novel database of kinship relations among the political elites of Chile in the nineteenth century, this thesis identifies the impact of family networks on the formation of political factions in the period 1828-1894. The sociological literature theorising the cleavages that divided elites during the initial phases of state formation has focused on three domains: 1) The conflict between an expanding state and the elites; 2) the conflict between different economic elites; and 3) the conflict between cultural and ideological blocs.
    [Show full text]
  • La República Conservadora
    I.- Historia en perspectiva: Mundo, América y Chile La República Co nservado ra El triunfo del general Joaquín Prieto, en la batalla de Lircay (1830), además de poner fin a la guerra civil, marco el inicio de una nueva etapa de la historia de Chile. El grupo conservador se impuso de manera definitiva sobre los liberales y, una vez en el poder, se empeño en dar estabilidad al país y en diseñar las instituciones que rigieron durante gran parte del siglo XIX. Los conservadores eran un grupo muy variado de ciudadanos que encontraron en el pragmatismo de Diego Portales una buena interpretación de lo que entendían por orden institucional, basado en la administración centralizada del poder. Aunque Portales tuvo una breve participación directa en las actividades de gobierno, cuando fue Ministro del Interior, Relaciones Exteriores, Guerra y Marina, entre 1830 y 1831, tomo una serie de medidas tendientes a ordenar la actividad política y combatir diversos problemas sociales, y otras con el fin de eliminar a sus enemigos políticos: ü Sometió a los bandidos y cuatreros que asolaban los campos. ü Llamo a retiro a la mayor parte de la oficialidad del ejército que defendió las ideas liberales. ü Apreso y exilio a muchos lideres pipiolos. Hacia fines de 1831, el ministro se retiro del gobierno y asumió como intendente de Valparaíso, y volvió a dedicar su tiempo a sus actividades comerciales. Dos años después, el orden político que había pensado fue plasmado en una nueva Constitución (obra de Mariano Egaña), que rigió al país hasta 1925. Sin embargo, el devenir de los hechos hizo que Portales retomara, años más tarde, su participación directa en el gobierno, desempeñando cargos ministeriales hasta su muerte (7 de junio de 1837).
    [Show full text]
  • Del Orden Conservador a La Tardía Apertura Liberal. María Ignacia Orozco Valenzuela Pp
    ISSN 0719-5419 REVISTA BÚSQUEDAS POLÍTICAS · Volumen 2 Nº1 (2013) · Universidad Alberto Hurtado Chile en el siglo XIX: Del orden conservador a la tardía apertura liberal. María Ignacia Orozco Valenzuela Pp. 203-210 CHILE EN EL SIGLO XIX: DEL ORDEN CONSERVADOR A LA TARDÍA APERTURA LIBERAL. María Ignacia Orozco Valenzuela * Resumen: En este ensayo analizaremos en primer término el pensamiento conservador en América Latina en el siglo XIX. En segundo lugar, trataremos el pensamiento liberal en la región en el mismo siglo. En tercer lugar, presentaremos algunos casos de América Latina y en cuarto lugar, nos abocaremos al caso de Chile en este periodo. Para finalizar con nuestras conclusiones. Palabras Claves: Historia, Chile, Actores Políticos. * Estudiante de Ciencia Política y Relaciones Internacionales, Universidad Alberto Hurtado. Revista Búsquedas Políticas Vol. 2 Nº1-2013 | 203 María Ignacia Orozco Valenzuela Introducción Las diferencias más destacadas entre el pensamiento conservador y liberal son las siguientes: los conservadores, propugnaban una economía proteccionista, se basaban en el derecho natural, ellos no buscaban cambios y si se llegaran a realizar serían los mínimos, rechazaban la inmigración extranjera, entre otros. En cambio, los liberales apoyaban una economía de libre mercado, la abolición de la esclavitud, el voto universal donde se discriminaba a los analfabetos, querían una educación laica; etc. En el estudio del caso chileno, partimos señalando la guerra civil de 1829 en la cual dos bandos, conservadores y liberales, se enfrentaron en una guerra de ideología y de caudillos, las tropas conservadoras ganaron y esto marcó el comienzo del gobierno conservador en Chile y la llamada época “portaliana”.
    [Show full text]
  • UNA CORRESPONDENCIA OLVIDADA: Manuel Montt Y Domingo F
    AVANCES [UNA CORRESPONDENCIA OLVIDADA: Manuel Montt y Domingo F. Sarmiento 1841 -1879] Sergio Vergara Quiroz Introducción Hace diez años publiqué una recopilación documental que permitió acceder al mundo doméstico según como lo veían e interpretaban sus protagonistas, hasta entonces sin voz registrada, fue también el primer epistolario femenino que se publicaba en Hispanoamérica: Cartas de mujeres en Chile, 1630-1885, Editorial Andrés Bello, Santiago, 1987. Hoy regreso a ese tipo de documentación, para recoger una correspondencia olvidada: la que se cruzaron estos hombres públicos, unidos por una amistad y una vocación de servicio que allí aparece con diáfana claridad, así como sus personalidades, la tantas veces esbozada del argentino y la casi desconocida del chileno (1). Las cartas de Montt se encuentran en el Museo Sarmiento, en el arbolado barrio Belgrano, en Buenos Aires. Son documentos manuscritos, de letra pequeña, clara y ordenada, sin enmiendas ni tachaduras y con la firma sencilla de su autor al final. Las de Sarmiento se guardan en el Archivo Central de la Universidad de Chile, son fotocopias del original, por tanto, están desvaídas. Su letra es grande y desordenada, con borrones, cambios y agregados. El epistolario reunido es valioso, contribuye a ello la alta figuración de sus autores; la importancia del contenido, que espontáneamente pasa de temas de Estado a los domésticos y la novedad de su utilización. Por ello, estoy haciendo un libro que reproducirá este material, más un estudio sobre sus autores, del cual este artículo es su primera aproximación. Cuenta además, con el apoyo del Departamento de Investigación y Desarrollo, DID, de la Universidad de Chile (2).
    [Show full text]
  • Puerto Montt Puerto Montt CHILE
    PERU NOTES BOLIVIA BRAZIL © 2009 maps.com Pacific CHILE O cean ARGENTINA PORT EXPLORER Puerto Montt Puerto Montt CHILE GENERAL INFORMATION Puerto Montt is lo- areas and seafront streets of Puerto Montt and leveled the nearby city cated on the north shore of the Reloncavi Sound that of Valdivia. It was the largest earthquake ever recorded by modern in- opens up to the Gulf of Ancud and out to the Pacific struments (9.5). The quake, with a force of 100 billion tons of TNT was Ocean. Set in northern Patagonia, Puerto Montt is so powerful that seismologists were able to record the earth as it liter- the end of the road (and rail) when heading south in ally vibrated like a bell for days afterward. The resulting tsunami raced Chile. To go any further visitors and locals must take 10,000 miles across the Pacific Ocean at over 200 mph slamming a day a ferry or a flight. later into Onagawa, Japan and leaving Hilo, Hawai’i (6,600 miles from Puerto Montt is in the heart of Chile’s stunningly Southern Chile) devastated in its infamous wake. beautiful Lake Region (Los Lagos), the ancestral HISTORY For thousands of years, well before the arrival of the first home of the proud Mapuche people. The town was Europeans, Chile’s long narrow coast was populated by several strong founded on February 12, 1853 by Vicente Perez Ro- tribes. The Mapuche tribe (called Araucanos by the Spaniards) lived sales (a leading Chilean diplomat) together with Ger- in the central and southern area of Chile, while the Quechua tribe and man immigrants from Bavaria who had been invited Aymara people lived in the Highlands and Midlands of northern Chile by the government of Chile to settle the area.
    [Show full text]
  • La Radicalización De La Oposición Política De San Felipe: El Motín De 1850
    LA RADICALIZACIÓN DE LA OPOSICIÓN POLÍTICA DE SAN FELIPE: EL MOTÍN DE 1850 Esteban Garcés Dupouy* Universidad Andrés Bello, Chile El presente artículo busca generar una revisión y análisis del proceso de radicalización que vivió la ciudad de San Felipe durante la década de 1840, el cual finalizará con el estallido de un motín en dicha ciudad, cuyas consecuencias no solo afectaran a la clase liberal de la ciudad sino que tendrá efectos en la oposición a nivel nacional. Se busca en este artículo dar cuenta de cómo la tensión política a nivel nacional entre conservadores y liberales se proyectaba a nivel provincial, llegando incluso a materializarse en el desarrollo de una sublevación armada. Palabras Claves: motín, radicalización, oposición, liberalismo, conservadores THE RADICALIZATION OF THE POLITICAL OPPOSITION OF SAN FELIPE: THE MUTINY OF 1850 The present article aims to generate a review and analysis of the process of radicalization that lived the city of San Felipe during the 1840s, which ends with the outbreak of a riot in that city, whose consequences affect not only the liberal class of the city but shall have effects in the opposition at national level. This article seeks to relate how the national political tension between conservatives and liberals was projected at the provincial level, even to materialize in the development of an armed uprising. Keywords: riot, radicalization, opposition, liberalism, conservatives Artículo Recibido: 23 de Septiembre de 2016 Artículo Aprobado: 12 de Noviembre de 2016 * Licenciado en Historia, Universidad Andrés Bello. E-mail: [email protected] Intus-Legere Historia / issn 0718-5456 / Año 2016, Vol.
    [Show full text]
  • Santiago, Always Looking, Never Finding
    Santiago, always looking, never finding. Who would help me To disarm your ancient history And from pieces to conquer you again A city I want to have for everyone built That feeds whoever wants to enjoy. (Luis Lebert, To my City) Anyone who approaches Santiago with open-mindedness will enjoy a city that has never stopped making and remaking itself, as if it always wanted to know why it is here, what it is doing here, where it is going. Santiago does not have a unique identity, on the contrary, it is always multiple, it is the identity given to it by its people, its neighborhoods and by landscape, the ever present mountain range of the Andes that marks the orientation and the seasons. You will not find here a nation or a people, but a fragmented and reconstituted history, made over and over again, full of small and great contradictions, sometimes with great inequities, and others with great generosity. A city destroyed and rebuilt dozens of times in its history, either by the earthquakes or avenues of the rivers, or in its origin by the old inhabitants. You will not find old buildings, accordingly. The oldest, the Church of San Francisco, begun in 1572, is on its feet and has heroically resisted great earthquakes, probably because in its foundations was used Inca technology of large stone boulders that absorbed the displacement of the earth. Scarce is then the antique Santiago. Spanish colonial buildings disappeared. Here and there you will find buildings from the 19th century, sometimes entire districts, many of them devotees of the French style of the Belle Epoque.
    [Show full text]
  • Chile and Perú Near Rupture (1834)
    rdolfo crlderón cousiño SHORT DIPL0MRT1C HISTORY OF THE CHILERN-PERUVlRN RELRTIONS 1819-1879 "FACTA n o n VERBA" Ist ENQLISH EDITION Santiago de Chile IMPRENTA UNIVERSITARIA ESTADO 65 1920 The Question Between Chile and Perú ADOLFO CALDERÓN COUSIÑO SHORT DIPLOMALO HISTORV OF THE CHILEAN-PERC1VIHN RELATIOHS 1819-1879 "FACTA NON- VERBA 1st ENQLI5H EDITION Santiago de Chile IMPRENTA UNIVERSITARIA ESTADO 65 1920 THE CHILEAN-PERUVIAN FRIEND- SHIP AND ITS DIPLOMATIC HISTORY «.Facta non verba». We must confess, although it is painful to do so, that the policy of approachment and cordial friendship with Perú, which has constituted always an aspiration, as noble as fraternal, of our leaders and of the Chilean Nation, has always finished in regrettable failure. We do not refer only to present times, after the Ancón Treaty, but to all the life of Perú as an independent people. It is to be thought that Peruvian ill— will for all that is Chilean is the natural sequence of the animosity and rancour aroused by the war of the Pacific, but this is a complete mistake. As we will see in this brief histórical digest, which is a mere — 8 — exposition of official undeniable documents, Perú since she was born to free life with the help of Chile, has been a latent enemy of this country and the peruvian antagonism and ingratitude have been exhibi,ted in all forms at every moment with. or without cause; it could almost be said that this antagonism as all the cha- racteristics of racial hatred. It is difficult to believe that any country has received from a neighbour so many Services as those received by Perú from our country up to 1879, and we will see the form in which these Services were retributed.
    [Show full text]
  • Science and Passion in America; Ciencia Y
    CULTURE &HISTORY DIGITAL JOURNAL 1(2) December 2012, m103 eISSN 2253-797X doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.3989/chdj.2012.m103 Science and Passion in America Rafael Sagredo Baeza Instituto de Historia, Ponticia Universidad Cato´lica de Chile, Santiago, Chile e-mail: [email protected] Received: 1 July 2012; Accepted: 2 September 2012; Published online: 8 January 2013 ABSTRACT: In addition to increasing our knowledge and understanding of the naturalists who explored America at various times, particularly in the 18th and 19th centuries, we seek to discuss the personal, intimate, private, and sentimental nature of individuals who are usually described as well-bred, parsimonious, unfeeling, objective, rigorous, and methodical. For the same reason, perhaps, they are assumed to have stayed aloof from any form of sentimental or passionate relationships in the course of their excursions, despite the fact that the latter often lasted not for months but for years, and that in some instances were not conducted overland but involved prolonged voyages on the high seas. KEYWORDS: history of science; American history; naturalists; passions; emotions Citation / Co´mo citar este artı´culo: Sagredo, Rafael (2012) ‘‘Science and Passion in America’’. Culture & History Digital Journal 1(2): m103. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.3989/chdj.2012.m103 RESUMEN: Ciencia y pasio´n en Ame´rica.- Adema´s de avanzar en el conocimiento y comprensio´n de los naturalistas que exploraron Ame´rica en algu´n momento, particularmente en los siglos XVIII y XIX, nos interesa relevar la dimensio´n personal,´ ıntima, privada, sentimental, de sujetos que corrientemente son presentados como hombres comedidos, parcos, frı´os, objetivos, rigurosos y meto´dicos y, tal vez por eso, se supone, ajenos a cualquier tipo de relacio´n sentimental o pasional durante sus excursiones.
    [Show full text]