Marx as the New Feuerbach: Form, Content, and Sign in Baudrillard’s The Mirror of Production
The Persistence of Form In The Mirror of Production , Jean Baudrillard makes a brief but devastating remark: “Marx made a radical critique of political economy, but still in the form of political economy” (Baudrillard, 1981, p. 33). The sentence appears almost in passing, yet it quietly reorganizes the entire logic of the text. What initially looks like a critique of Marxism gradually reveals itself as something more unsettling: a meditation on the persistence of form beneath critique itself. Baudrillard frames this problem through an unexpected reference to Ludwig Feuerbach . The gesture is significant because Marx’s criticism of Feuerbach already revolved around a tension between content and form . Feuerbach had argued that theology alienates humanity by projecting human powers onto God. Religion, in this reading, estranges humanity from its own essence. Marx accepted the force of this analysis but regarded it as incomplete. In his view, Feuerbach displaced the theological con...