Hugo Pezzini has made English the main language
of his writing.
Previously, he wrote and published both in Spanish and Portuguese
(He
still writes as well in these two languages).
His current fiction blends the ironic bitterness
found in the mythology of Buenos Aires's tango
with the sensual tropical hedonism of the people
of Rio de Janeiro.
Hugo Pezzini received a Bachelor in Arts degree
—summa cum
laude, 4.0; Phi
Beta Kappa— in English and American
Literature, and Interdisciplinary Honors (with
a minor in Philosophy), from Hunter
College, of the City
University of New York. He is
an Instructor of Record of New York University, where he is currently writing his dissertation for his Doctor of Philosophy degree in Comparative Literature. He already
holds a Master of Arts degree, also in Comparative
Literature,
awarded by the latter institution.
In 2003, he wrote The
Latin American Literature of the Neoliberal
Crisis: The Emergence of a Postmodern Posthegemonic
Heterotopy? This is a critical-theory
book, strongly charged with his personal political
views. (At the July 2004 Cultural
Analysis Summer Academy, the conference
on academia & activism organized by the
Universiteit van
Amsterdam - the Free University
of Amsterdam, in Holland - Hugo Pezzini
introduced his book sarcastically describing
it as "a biased work”).
Hugo writes fiction, poetry; theoretical, analytical,
and critical articles and essays on literature,
politics, culture, philosophy, cinema, theater,
painting, and sculpture.
Himself a painter, he has described his painting style (perhaps
not without some irony) as concrete
expressionism. He is finishing a novel,
of which he thinks under the working title Tropical
Paradise Lost.
Hugo Pezzini lived the first eight months of
2004 in Paris, where he did research at the
Université
de Paris (Sorbonne),
and at the Bibliothèque
Nationale de France, François
Mitterrand, on issues related to resistance
and rebellion.
Having formerly resided in Buenos Aires and
Rio de Janeiro, in January of 1988 this writer
arrived to New York City, and has since made
of Manhattan his home. His Central Park West
apartment, where both his many large and intricate
small paintings hang, has been described by
the Irish writer Emer Martin as “the inside
of Hugo's head.”