Baudrillard Turns Marx Against Marxism: Production and the Limits of Western Thought
Western Thinkers. AI image Introduction: The Specter of Production The most radical gesture in Jean Baudrillard’s The Mirror of Production is not a critique of capitalism. It is a refusal of the very horizon that makes capitalism and its critique legible in the first place: production. What is at stake is not an economic disagreement, but the conceptual space in which capitalism itself becomes thinkable as a system and critique becomes possible as its negation. The thesis that structures this reading is therefore uncompromising: Marxism does not escape the conceptual universe of political economy; it universalizes its deepest metaphysical assumption—the idea that being is production. What appears as critique is, at a deeper level, the extension of the very logic it claims to overcome. In Baudrillard’s reading, historical materialism does not break with the system of production; it completes it by elevating it to a universal principle of intelligibility. This is why Baudril...