At one time critics tried to classify generationally the fiction writers who came to represent the extraordinary production and reception of the "new" narrative, and Puig was initially situated with the younger writers who emerged in the late 1960s, including Reinaldo Arenas, Guillermo Cabrera Infante, and Severo Sarduy. However, today one is more likely to read the work of Puig and others, such as Arenas, Cabrera Infante, Sarduy, Julio Cortazar, Jose Donoso, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Carlos Fuentes, and Mario Vargas Llosa, not as representative of radically different phases but radier as a continuum of contemporary Latin-American narrative.
Though Puig, like many other prominent writers, had lived outside Latin America for some time, and his writing deals with issues in contemporary culture and society that cross national boundaries, his work is also firmly rooted in the realities of his own country (Argentina) and Latin America as a whole. He was born on 28 December 1932 in General Villegas, where he spent his formative years with his family.
This is a free page. This page contains 163 words. This
biography contains 6,561 words (approx. 22 pages at 300
words per page).
Read the rest of this Biography with our Manuel Puig Access Pass.