Ricardo Piglia (born November 24, 1941, Adrogué, Argentina—died January 6, 2017, Buenos Aires) was an Argentine writer and critic best known for his introduction of hard-boiled fiction to the Argentine public.
Piglia was born in Adrogué, within Greater Buenos Aires, and he moved to Mar del Plata as a teen. After attending the National University of La Plata in 1961–62, he began to write fiction; his first collection of short stories, La invasión (1967), established his reputation as a writer. Another collection, Nombre falso (1975; Assumed Name), includes “Homenaje a Roberto Arlt,” which pays homage to an earlier Argentine writer of crime fiction. Piglia’s own writing reflects his interest in this genre, although his novels and stories are deliberately intellectual and full of allusions. His novel Respiración artificial (1980; Artificial Respiration) is concerned, in part, with cultural dissidents. La ciudad ausente (1992; The Absent City) is set in the near future in Buenos Aires, where electronic and technological advances are accompanied by increased political repression. Later works include the novel Blanco nocturno (2010; “Nocturnal Target”) and the short-story collections Prisión perpetua (1988; “Perpetual Prison”) and Cuentos morales (1995; “Moral Tales”).
As a critic, Piglia was a historian of popular culture, and he wrote about such authors as Jorge Luis Borges, Arlt, Julio Cortázar, and Manuel Puig. He also helped promote a series of books, Serie Negra, that reprinted Spanish translations of classic hard-boiled American crime fiction.
In addition to his writing, Piglia taught at several institutions, including Harvard and Princeton universities. At the latter institution he served as the Walter S. Carpenter Professor of Language, Literature, and Civilization of Spain from 2001 until his retirement as professor emeritus in 2011.