Death and Fatal Theory in Baudrillard
Death and Fatality, Piranesi Style. AI image Introduction: Crossing Death and Fatality Twentieth-century critical thought often sought to reveal what lies beneath appearances. From Marx’s critique of political economy to Freud’s psychoanalysis and Lévi-Strauss’s structural anthropology, theory promised to expose hidden mechanisms—exploitation, repression, or structural regularities. Yet advanced capitalism demonstrates an unsettling resilience: critique itself may have lost its subversive efficacy, becoming instead internal to the very processes it intends to challenge. It is at this juncture that Jean Baudrillard introduces the notion of fatal theory . Unlike inherited modes of analysis, this approach does not aim to uncover hidden truths. Rather, it confronts systems that absorb, circulate, and neutralize critique. Crucially, fatal theory is tied to what Baudrillard calls death —not as a biological phenomenon, but as a structural limit that systems attempt to exclude yet cannot ...