Miguel Barnet (born January 28, 1940, Havana, Cuba) is a novelist, poet, ethnographer, and expert on Afro-Cuban culture.
Barnet came from a prominent Cuban family of Catalan descent. He spent part of his childhood in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S., and was fluent in English. Though not a member of the Communist Party, he remained in Cuba, faithful to the Castro regime. From 1995 he headed the Havana-based Fernando Ortiz Foundation, which promotes and preserves the works of his mentor, who was a prominent anthropologist and scholar of Afro-Cuban culture.
Barnet is best known for his Biografía de un cimarrón (1966; Biography of a Runaway Slave, also published as The Autobiography of a Runaway Slave), a trend-setting book that inaugurated and then became the standard for what was to be known as testimonio, or testimonial narrative, in Latin America. In these works, a subject who has been interviewed on tape by the writer tells his life in the first person. The author transcribes and edits the material to give it final form. Subjects are usually marginalized members of society, such as the centenarian former slave, Esteban Montejo, whose story is told in Biografía de un cimarrón. Barnet derived this technique from his training in ethnography, but his unqualified success stems from his being first and foremost a poet with an ear for the mythic quality of the informant’s tale.
Barnet’s first books were collections of poetry, La piedra fina y el pavorreal (1963; “The Gem and the Peacock”) and Isla de güijes (1964; “Island of Sprites”), but after the worldwide success of Biografía de un cimarrón, he turned more to prose. In 1969 he published Canción de Rachel (Rachel’s Song), a variation on the method used in the earlier testimonio. The subject of Rachel’s Song is an old diva from a Havana burlesque. Her story is drawn from printed sources, and she is a composite of different real persons. In 1981 Barnet published Gallego (“Galician”), again using the stories of several people to draw the first-person portrait of a Spanish immigrant to Cuba, and in 1986, La vida real (“Real Life”), to re-create the lives of Cubans who immigrated to the United States as workers before the 1959 revolution. Oficio de Angel (1989; “Angel’s Trade”), an autobiographical narrative, is a more conventional sort of novel. Barnet continued to write poetry, which was published as a collection in Con pies de gato (1993; With Cat’s Feet).