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Consumption and Its Linguistic Structure: Baudrillard, Lacan, and the Semiotics of Desire

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The Mall. AI image Introduction — From Production to Signification Classical political economy, most notably in the work of Karl Marx, privileges production as the primary site of social meaning. Labor, class relations, and the extraction of value constitute its analytical core. In The Consumer Society , however, Jean Baudrillard proposes a decisive shift: the organizing logic of late modern societies is no longer production, but consumption. This shift is not merely empirical; it is conceptual. Consumption cannot be reduced to the satisfaction of needs or the circulation of goods. Rather, it operates as a system of signification. This article develops that insight further by advancing a stronger claim: consumption is not merely analogous to language—it is structured as such. Drawing on structural linguistics and psychoanalysis, particularly the work of Jacques Lacan, I argue that consumption functions as a symbolic system through which identity is articulated, social differences a...

Marxism as the Mirror of Capitalism: Baudrillard and the Critique of Productivism

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Introduction In the late 1960s and early 1970s, Jean Baudrillard underwent a decisive theoretical shift that would shape his later work. Writing in the context of the journal Utopie , he began to distance himself not only from classical Marxism but from a broader assumption embedded across modern thought: that production constitutes the fundamental horizon of human activity. This shift finds its most explicit formulation in The Mirror of Production , where Baudrillard advances a striking claim: Marxism is not the critique of capitalism it presents itself to be, but rather its reflection. The provocation lies in the form of the argument. Marxism does not simply fail to overcome capitalism; it reproduces its underlying categories—the primacy of labor, production, and utility—while reversing their value. What appears as critique remains internal to the same conceptual framework. Baudrillard’s project, therefore, is not to correct Marxism but to move beyond the very paradigm that su...

The New Heresy: Baudrillard and the Taboo of Reality

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Bûcher des vanités. AI art Introduction — When Questioning Becomes Transgression Critical thought once assumed that reality could be questioned. Philosophy, politics, and theory all relied on a minimal distance from the real, a space in which interrogation remained legitimate. One could challenge institutions, reinterpret events, or expose illusions without crossing a fundamental boundary. In the opening chapter of The Intelligence of Evil or the Lucidity Pact , Jean Baudrillard suggests that this space has collapsed. What once counted as critique now appears as transgression. Baudrillard’s discourse is scandalous not because it opposes the system, but because it violates a new taboo: the unquestionability of reality itself. Under what he calls “Integral Reality,” to question the real is no longer an intellectual act. It is treated as heresy. From Critique to Taboo There was a time when disagreement did not imply moral fault. To question truth claims was part of thought itsel...

Differentiating Indifference: Baudrillard, Saussure, and the Persistence of Opposition

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“Vive la différence !” AI art Introduction: A World Without Difference? In modern thought, meaning is often grounded in difference. From linguistics to philosophy, sense emerges not from isolated terms, but from relations that distinguish one element from another. Yet in the opening chapter of The Intelligence of Evil or the Lucidity Pact , Jean Baudrillard proposes a more unsettling scenario: a world in which distinctions no longer carry weight. What makes this diagnosis striking is that his text itself remains structured through a dense network of oppositions—real and imaginary, truth and verification, possibility and reality. The persistence of these contrasts raises an immediate question: how can a theory of indifference be articulated through difference? This essay argues that Baudrillard does not abandon oppositional thinking. He mobilizes it in order to expose its transformation. Distinctions remain in place, yet they no longer generate meaning. They are still visible,...

From Difference to Indifference: Saussure and Baudrillard on the Fate of Meaning

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Introduction: The Saturation of Difference Modern thought has often grounded meaning in difference. From linguistics to philosophy, the assumption persists that sense emerges not from what things are in themselves, but from the relations that distinguish them. But what becomes of meaning when those distinctions no longer operate as they once did? This problem takes a particularly sharp form when reading Ferdinand de Saussure alongside Jean Baudrillard. If Saussure establishes difference as the condition of signification, Baudrillard describes a world in which differences proliferate to the point of saturation, losing their capacity to produce meaning. What emerges is not identity, but indifference: a regime in which distinctions remain, yet no longer carry weight. Rather than rejecting the Saussurean insight, Baudrillard pushes it to a limit where it turns against itself. When everything becomes different, nothing any longer signifies. Saussure: Meaning as Difference Saussure...