Consumption as Language: Baudrillard Between Marx and Saussure
The Barcode of Meaning. AI image Thesis: Baudrillard Saussureanizes Political Economy This article argues that Jean Baudrillard reworks Marxist political economy through the influence of Ferdinand de Saussure’s structural linguistics. In Baudrillard’s account, commodities no longer function primarily as economic objects satisfying material needs. Instead, they operate as differential signs within a social code. Consumption begins to resemble language: individuals communicate distinctions, identities, and social positions through systems of signs. In this sense, Baudrillard “Saussureanizes” political economy by shifting the analysis of capitalism from production toward sign-value. Introduction Classical Marxism understood capitalism primarily through production. Labour, commodities, exploitation, and exchange formed the conceptual center of Marx’s critique. Alienation itself emerged through the worker’s separation from the product of labour and from meaningful productive activity....