No More Bachelors: Duchamp and the Logic of the Perfect Crime
The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors, Even ( La mariée mise à nu par ses célibataires, même ), or The Large Glass ( Le Grand Verre ), by Marcel Duchamp. Source : Wikipedia Introduction: A Marginal Remark as Method At first glance, the reference appears incidental. In the middle of a dense meditation on reality, illusion, and disappearance in The Perfect Crime , Jean Baudrillard briefly invokes Marcel Duchamp. The line is almost casual: “ Il n’y a même plus besoin de célibataires pour la mettre à nu ” (Baudrillard, 1995)—there is no longer even any need for bachelors to strip her bare. Yet this passing remark, tied to La mariée mise à nu par ses célibataires, même , does more than illustrate a point. It offers a structural key. What appears secondary can instead be read as diagnostic. Read this way, Baudrillard’s text unfolds not simply as a theory of simulation, but as the account of a transformation: the passage from a world governed by mediation, delay, and s...