The Algorithmic Mirror: Baudrillard, Self-Production, and the Digital Subject
Pygmalion: Manufacturing the Ideal Self. AI image Thesis This article argues that Jean Baudrillard’s critique of “self-production”—the modern imperative to continuously construct, optimize, and perform the self—anticipated the structure of contemporary digital subjectivity. What Baudrillard identified as the productivist logic of late capitalism has intensified under social media, platform culture, and artificial intelligence, where individuals increasingly construct themselves as visible, measurable, and continuously optimizable entities within algorithmic systems. Production no longer functions merely as an economic category; it increasingly defines the conditions under which contemporary existence becomes legible, valuable, and socially real. Introduction One of the most striking aspects of Baudrillard’s early work is the extent to which it anticipated forms of subjectivity that would only fully emerge decades later. In The Mirror of Production, he argues that modern society no ...