Abstract
The book Maquiavelo en la Argentina. Usos y Lecturas, 1830-1940 invites us to delve into the receptions, circulations and readings in Argentina of one of the political thinkers who, thanks to a certain halo of enigma and discomfort and the open nature of his texts, has been the subject of a profuse ambivalence and divergence in his readings and evaluations: Nicolás Machiavelli. This depth and intensity is directly proportional to the shock that its irruption has caused in Western political thought and that, without any doubt, has given birth to political modernity.