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Method in the Madness: The Logic of Indeterminacy in Post-Structuralism

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The Globe. AI image Introduction — Is There Method in the Madness? “Though this be madness, yet there is method in’t.” The line, spoken by Polonius in Hamlet, captures a paradox that extends well beyond the stage. It proves especially suggestive when approaching post-structuralist writing, which often appears, at first encounter, disordered, playful, even erratic. Readers of Jacques Derrida or Michel Foucault frequently describe a sense of instability: meanings shift, arguments double back, and clarity seems continually deferred. This first impression, however, can be misleading. What looks like looseness is often the product of careful construction. These texts are not casual or improvised; they are highly deliberate. The real question, then, is not whether method is present, but why such disciplined procedures are used to produce instability. If meaning cannot settle, why is the reasoning so exact? The Non-Finality Thesis Post-structuralist thought is commonly associated with...

Writing at Degree Zero: The Impossible Dream of Neutral Language

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Introduction — Is There Such a Thing as Colorless Writing? Can writing ever truly be neutral? The question appears simple, almost naïve, yet it has haunted modern literature with remarkable persistence. From the desire to strip language of ornament to the ambition of eliminating ideology, writers have repeatedly pursued a form of expression that might stand free of historical burden. But what if this effort were misguided from the outset? What if the attempt to remove ideology and style only produces another kind of ideology and style? The concept of “degree zero,” developed by Roland Barthes, emerges precisely at this tension. Rather than designating a pure origin of language, it names a moment in which writing confronts its own limits: the impossibility of escaping form, history, and signification. To grasp this claim, one must begin not with literature, but with linguistics, before passing through Jean-Paul Sartre and arriving at Barthes’ decisive reconfiguration of the problem....

The Eclipse of Seduction: Baudrillard Against Production

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Introduction — The Paradox of Disappearance We live in a cultural moment saturated with images of desire, sexuality, and transgression. From media aesthetics to everyday discourse, everything appears increasingly liberated, expressive, and exposed. Yet, in the opening pages of Seduction , Jean Baudrillard formulates a striking paradox: at the very moment when sex and desire are most intensely promoted, seduction disappears. This disappearance is not the result of repression. On the contrary, it unfolds alongside the proliferation of discourses that claim to liberate desire. As Baudrillard writes in the introduction, “Given the present-day promotion of sex, evil and perversion… it might seem paradoxical that seduction has remained in the shadows” (Baudrillard, 1990/1979). The paradox, however, is only apparent. What disappears is not desire, nor even eroticism, but something more elusive: a form of play, reversibility, and illusion that cannot be reduced to production, expression, o...

From Production to Obscenity: Seduction and the Fate of the Visible in Baudrillard

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Introduction: A Concept Under Transformation In Jean Baudrillard’s later work, the concept of production does not disappear; rather, it undergoes a radical internal transformation. Following De la séduction (1979), Baudrillard’s thought increasingly shifts toward seduction, reversibility, and the play of appearances. However, this shift does not mark a simple break with earlier concerns. Instead, production is reconfigured from within, revealing a deeper logic already implicit in its modern deployment. As Baudrillard suggests, one may glimpse “another, parallel universe” that can no longer be interpreted through the categories of psychology, structure, or repression, but only in terms of play, challenge, and the strategy of appearances (Baudrillard, 1990, p. 7). This displacement signals not the abandonment of production , but its passage into a regime where visibility itself becomes excessive, ultimately tending toward obscenity . Production as the Imperative of Exposure In...

The Supremacy of the Object: Seduction, Simulation, and the Fate of the Subject

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To my teachers Introduction: Against the Sovereignty of the Subject “It is not the subject and its desire, but the object and its seduction that orders the world.” With this claim, Jean Baudrillard does more than invert a familiar philosophical hierarchy, he dismantles it. For centuries, Western thought has positioned the subject as the origin of meaning: as knower, agent, or producer. Baudrillard’s provocation is that this model no longer holds. The “supremacy of the object” does not simply reverse the relation between subject and object; it signals a transformation in which that distinction itself becomes unstable. What begins as a conceptual displacement unfolds, in his later work, into a broader diagnosis: a world governed by simulation and hyperreality, where the subject no longer occupies the center of experience. The Philosophical Privilege of the Subject From Immanuel Kant onward, modern philosophy grounds meaning in the structures of subjectivity. In Kant’s critical proj...