Marx Against Marxism III: The Museum, Primitive Art, and the Virus of Production
Thesis This article argues that Jean Baudrillard radicalizes Karl Marx’s reflections on self-critique by showing that Western thought universalizes its own categories precisely through acts of criticism, interpretation, and apparent openness toward cultural difference. What appears as dialogue with alterity — anthropology, museums, aesthetic appreciation, or Marxist analysis — becomes a process of conceptual absorption. Ritual objects are transformed into “art,” while Marxism replaces aesthetic interpretation with the language of production. In both cases, difference survives only after being translated into Western systems of intelligibility. The result is not genuine confrontation with alterity, but its domestication. Self-Critique and the Universalization of the West One of the most significant moments in Jean Baudrillard’s The Mirror of Production occurs when he returns to Karl Marx’s Grundrisse , this time not to question labor or historical evolutionism directly, but to in...