From Difference to Indifference: Saussure and Baudrillard on the Fate of Meaning
Introduction: The Saturation of Difference Modern thought has often grounded meaning in difference. From linguistics to philosophy, the assumption persists that sense emerges not from what things are in themselves, but from the relations that distinguish them. But what becomes of meaning when those distinctions no longer operate as they once did? This problem takes a particularly sharp form when reading Ferdinand de Saussure alongside Jean Baudrillard. If Saussure establishes difference as the condition of signification, Baudrillard describes a world in which differences proliferate to the point of saturation, losing their capacity to produce meaning. What emerges is not identity, but indifference: a regime in which distinctions remain, yet no longer carry weight. Rather than rejecting the Saussurean insight, Baudrillard pushes it to a limit where it turns against itself. When everything becomes different, nothing any longer signifies. Saussure: Meaning as Difference Saussure...