Looking for the Keys Under the Wrong Light: Baudrillard’s Critique of Historical Materialism
“Miscomprehension”, in the style of Hopper. AI image Light as an Epistemic Trap A man stands beneath a streetlamp late at night, anxiously searching the pavement. A friend approaches and asks what he is doing. “I lost my car keys,” the man replies. After several minutes of helping him search, the friend asks the obvious question: “Did you lose them here?” “No,” the man answers, pointing farther down the street, “I lost them over there. But the light is better here.” Jean Baudrillard briefly invokes this anecdote in Chapter 4 of The Mirror of Production. Though mentioned only in passing, the image condenses the entire logic of his critique of historical materialism . Baudrillard’s claim is not merely that Marxism occasionally misinterprets other societies. More radically, historical materialism searches for meaning only within the conceptual field illuminated by its own categories: production, labor, contradiction, and economic structure. The Limits of Historical Materialism Hi...