The Eclipse of Seduction: Baudrillard Against Production
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...