ABSTRACT

Jean Baudrillard was one of the most influential, radical, and visionary thinkers of our age. His ideas have had a profound bearing on countless fields, from art and politics to science and technology. Once hailed as the high priest of postmodernity, Baudrillard’s sophisticated theoretical analyses far surpass such simplistic caricatures. Bringing together Baudrillard’s most accomplished and perceptive commentators, this book assesses his legacy for the twenty-first century. It includes two outstanding essays by Baudrillard: a remarkable, previously unpublished work entitled ‘The vanishing point of communication,’ and one of Baudrillard’s final texts, ‘On disappearance’, a veritable tour de force that serves as a culmination of his theoretical trajectory and a provocation to a new generation of thinkers. Employing Baudrillard’s key concepts, such as simulation, disappearance, and symbolic exchange, and deploying his most radical strategies, such as escalation, seduction, and fatality, the volume’s contributors offer a series of thought-provoking analyses of everything from art to politics, and from laughter to terror. It will be essential reading for anyone concerned with the fate of the world in the new millennium.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction The evil genius of Jean Baudrillard

ByDAVID B. CLARKE, MARCUS A. DOEL, WILLIAM MERRIN

chapter 1|9 pages

The vanishing point of communication

ByJEAN BAUDRILLARD

chapter 2|6 pages

On disappearance

ByJEAN BAUDRILLARD

chapter 3|19 pages

Commentaries on Jean Baudrillard’s ‘On disappearance’

ByREX BUTLER, DAVID B. CLARKE, MARCUS A. DOEL, GARY GENOSKO

chapter 4|12 pages

Baudrillard’s taste

ByREX BUTLER

chapter 6|8 pages

Better than butter: Margarine and simulation

ByGARY GENOSKO

chapter 7|14 pages

Baudrillard and the art conspiracy

ByDOUGLAS KELLNER

chapter 8|13 pages

‘Mirror, mirror’: The Student of Prague in Baudrillard, GRAEME GILLOCH

ByKracauer and Kittler

chapter 9|18 pages

The Gulf War revisited

ByPHILIP HAMMOND

chapter 10|11 pages

Fate of the animal

ByPAUL HEGARTY

chapter 11|18 pages

Reality: now and then – Baudrillard and W-Bush’s America

ByDIANE RUBENSTEIN

chapter 12|16 pages

Baudrillard’s sense of humour

ByMIKE GANE

chapter 13|9 pages

The (un)sealing of the penultimate

ByANDREW WERNICK