After the Wall: De-simulation, Evil, and the Fate of History in Baudrillard
The Simulation of the Fall. AI image Opening Scene: 1989 as a Shock to History The evening of November 9, 1989, when the Berlin Wall fell, appeared as a breach in the texture of late twentieth-century history. Crowds crossed checkpoints, dismantling concrete with improvised tools, while images of jubilation circulated across the globe. For a brief moment, history seemed to recover a sense of unpredictability. What had appeared frozen—structured by geopolitical equilibrium and managed narratives—suddenly moved again. Yet this apparent immediacy invites a more difficult question: did the collapse of the Wall interrupt the system, or did it stage the very illusion of interruption? Was this a genuine event, or a moment already destined for integration within a broader logic? It is precisely this ambiguity that animates the reflections of Jean Baudrillard on modernity, history, and their limits. Against the Philosophy of History: An Anti-Hegelian Vision To approach this question, on...