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Manuel Puig (1932 - 1990)

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Texts:  Manuel Puig
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Kiss of the Spider Woman

Names Index:
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Manuel Puig and the Spider Woman : His Life and FictionsManuel Puig and the Spider Woman : His Life and Fictions by Suzanne Jill Levine

Manuel Puig (1932-1990), Argentinian author of Kiss of the Spider Woman and pioneer of high camp, stands alone in the pantheon of contemporary Latin American literature. Strongly influenced by Hollywood films of the thirties and forties, his many-layered novels and plays integrate serious fiction and popular culture, mixing political and sexual themes with B-movie scenarios. When his first two novels were published in the late 1960s, they delighted the public but were dismissed as frivolous by the leftist intellectuals of the Boom; his third novel was banned by the Peronist government for irreverence. His influence was already felt, though-even by writers who had dismissed him-and by the time the film version of Kiss of the Spider Woman became a worldwide hit, he was a renowned literary figure.

Puig's way of life was as unconventional as his fiction: he spoke of himself in the female form in Spanish, renamed his friends for his favorite movie stars, referred to his young male devotees as "daughters," and, as a perennial expatriate, lived (often with his mother) everywhere from Rome to Rio de Janeiro. Suzanne Jill Levine, his principal English translator, draws upon years of friendship as well as copious research and interviews in her remarkable book, the first biography of the inimitable writer.

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Pubis AngelicalPubis Angelical by Manuel Puig, Elena Brunet (Translator)

In this artful fusion of espionage thriller and science fiction, Manuel Puig tells one story shared by three women-an actress in the 1930s, living in her husband's fairy-tale castle; a young woman in Mexico City in the 1970s, convalescing in a hospital; and a futuristic cyborg sex slave, occupying an artificial landscape. In the haunting and mysterious language for which he is renowned, Puig explores the links between these women, as well as the links between genders and generations.

Best known for his novel Kiss of the Spider Woman, which has been adapted as a movie and a Broadway musical, Manuel Puig (1932-1990) also wrote Blood of Requited Love and Eternal Curse on the Reader of These Pages (both published by the University of Minnesota Press, 1999), as well as Betrayed by Rita Hayworth, Heartbreak Tango, and The Buenos Aires Affair.

"The most richly textured and extravagant fiction Puig has produced so far. . . . Brilliantly inventive."  -- New York Times

"Puig will now command attention from readers not previously familiar with his fiction." -- Library Journal

"This is Puig's best work." -- Choice

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Manuel Puig's Censored Life

By Claire Poche

Excerpt:

In 1963 Puig returned to Argentina. Despite General Ongania's established dictatorship, Puig was able to work in relative peace. By 1973, however, Isabel Peron, Juan Peron's widow, was in power and pulling the legislative reins as tight as possible to create an extremely right-wing air in the country. After publication of The Buenos Aires Affair, a book which metaphorically criticized Peronist policies, Puig was added to Isabel's hit-list. In 1974, a phone call urged him to leave the country in order to avoid persecution and/or death. Though Isabel's government did not last long, Argentinean resistance to Puig's work remained and he was forced to seek foreign publication of his subsequent works...

  

Manuel Puig

From The Knitting Circle

Excerpt:

He became well-known internationally with his novel Kiss of the Spider Woman, (1979), especially after is was made into a film in 1985. It was also made into a Broadway musical in 1993. The story is about two men in prison cells together. One is a hairdresser who tells fantastic tales based on film plots. Through these he seduces his cell-mate, a macho revolutionary...

   

Brief Encounter: An Interview with Manuel Puig

By Jorgelina Corbatta, Translated and adapted by Ilan Stavans, Center for Book Culture

Excerpt:

This interview with Manuel Puig took place during a weekend in September 1979, after he was part of a Congress of Hispanic-American Writers in Medellin, Colombia. Other participants in the event were Camilo Jose Cela, winner of the 1989 Nobel Prize for Literature, and the Mexican short-story writer and novelist Juan Rulfo...

  

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Names Index:
A
B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
| Authors Index | Scholars Index |

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