Fatal Theory and the Limits of Critique in Baudrillard
Introduction: When Critique Stops Working Twentieth-century critical thought was animated by a common ambition: to reveal what lies beneath appearances. Whether in political economy, psychoanalysis, or structuralism, theory sought to expose hidden mechanisms—exploitation, repression, underlying structures. Yet the persistence and adaptability of advanced capitalism raise a more troubling possibility: what if critique has lost its efficacy? More sharply, what if it now functions within the very processes it seeks to oppose? It is at this juncture that Jean Baudrillard proposes what he will later call fatal theory . Rather than refining inherited frameworks, he breaks with their underlying assumptions. The task is no longer to unmask a concealed reality, but to confront systems that absorb, circulate, and neutralize their own critique. The Limits of Classical Critique Baudrillard’s intervention targets a set of otherwise distinct traditions. In Karl Marx, critique proceeds by unc...