From Utility to Code: Baudrillard, Marx, and the Pacifying Effect of Consumption
The Reading Room. AI image Introduction The early work of Jean Baudrillard emerges from within the orbit of Karl Marx, yet quickly begins to displace its central assumptions. Where Marx situates social life in the dynamics of production, Baudrillard turns toward consumption as the decisive terrain of modern capitalism. This shift entails more than a change of emphasis. It redefines what counts as value , how social relations are organized, and even what it means to “need” something. Rather than simply opposing utility to superficial desire, Baudrillard shows how use-value and exchange value are reorganized under the dominance of sign-exchange . In doing so, he calls into question the apparent naturalness of needs themselves. Marx and the Naturalization of Need In Marx’s critique of political economy, value is structured around two key dimensions: use-value and exchange value . The former refers to the practical function of an object—its capacity to satisfy a human requirement—...