Posts

The Spectral Light of Political Economy: Baudrillard Beyond Marx

Image
Structural Limits of the Marxist Critique Near the end of Chapter 2 of The Mirror of Production, Jean Baudrillard makes a striking observation: political economy “projects itself retrospectively as a model” (Baudrillard, 1981, p. 63). The phrase appears within a methodological discussion concerning the limits of Marxist critique, yet it quietly transforms the frame of the argument. Marxism no longer appears merely as a theory of capitalism, but as a structure that illuminates history through categories already generated by capitalism itself. At stake in this passage is not simply the concept of production, but the way production becomes a principle of intelligibility. Earlier societies cease to appear as radically different forms of social existence and instead become incomplete versions of the present. Labor, exchange, accumulation, and economic rationality are projected backward as though they had always constituted the hidden truth of human organization. The present becomes the ...

Marx as the New Feuerbach: Form, Content, and Sign in Baudrillard’s The Mirror of Production

Image
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...

The Algorithmic Faust: Baudrillard, Khaby Lame, and the Digital Soul

Image
Pygmalion.exe—AI image Thesis This article argues that contemporary digital culture transforms the classical Faustian pact into a new form of algorithmic self-production. Whereas Goethe’s Faust exchanges his soul for knowledge, experience, and self-expansion, the digital subject increasingly converts identity itself into reproducible data, visibility, and continuous circulation within platform economies. Through Jean Baudrillard’s concept of self-production, the article interprets the “digital soul” not as metaphysical essence but as an operational identity optimized for algorithmic systems. Introduction Recent discussions surrounding Khaby Lame and the sale of his so-called “digital soul” reveal something philosophically unsettling about contemporary culture. The phrase itself initially appears absurd, almost satirical, yet it captures a genuine transformation in the structure of subjectivity under digital capitalism. What is being commercialized is no longer merely labor, celeb...

In the Shadow of Marxist Concepts: Difference, Self-Reflexivity, and the Collapse of Universals

Image
Studieraum mit klassischen Werken. AI image   “ Historical materialism, dialectics, modes of production, labor power—through these concepts Marxist theory has sought to shatter the abstract universality of the concepts of bourgeois thought: Nature and Progress, Man and Reason, formal Logic, Work, Exchange, etc. Yet Marxism in turn universalizes them with a ‘critical’ imperialism as ferocious as the other’s…to be logical, the concept of history must itself be regarded as historical, turn back upon itself, and only illuminate the context that produced it by abolishing itself. Instead, in Marxism history is transhistoricized: it redoubles on itself and thus is universalized. To be rigorous the dialectic must dialectically surpass and annul itself. ” J. Baudrillard. Thesis: This article argues that Baudrillard’s critique of Marxism in The Mirror of Production operates through a structuralist logic of difference and a Nietzschean suspicion toward universal truth, while also converg...

The Algorithmic Mirror: Baudrillard, Self-Production, and the Digital Subject

Image
Pygmalion: Manufacturing the Ideal Self. AI image Thesis This article argues that Jean Baudrillard’s critique of “self-production”—the modern imperative to continuously construct, optimize, and perform the self—anticipated the structure of contemporary digital subjectivity. What Baudrillard identified as the productivist logic of late capitalism has intensified under social media, platform culture, and artificial intelligence, where individuals increasingly construct themselves as visible, measurable, and continuously optimizable entities within algorithmic systems. Production no longer functions merely as an economic category; it increasingly defines the conditions under which contemporary existence becomes legible, valuable, and socially real. Introduction One of the most striking aspects of Baudrillard’s early work is the extent to which it anticipated forms of subjectivity that would only fully emerge decades later. In The Mirror of Production, he argues that modern society no ...

Baudrillard Turns Marx Against Marxism: Production and the Limits of Western Thought

Image
Western Thinkers. AI image   Introduction: The Specter of Production The most radical gesture in Jean Baudrillard’s The Mirror of Production is not a critique of capitalism. It is a refusal of the very horizon that makes capitalism and its critique legible in the first place: production. What is at stake is not an economic disagreement, but the conceptual space in which capitalism itself becomes thinkable as a system and critique becomes possible as its negation. The thesis that structures this reading is therefore uncompromising: Marxism does not escape the conceptual universe of political economy; it universalizes its deepest metaphysical assumption—the idea that being is production. What appears as critique is, at a deeper level, the extension of the very logic it claims to overcome. In Baudrillard’s reading, historical materialism does not break with the system of production; it completes it by elevating it to a universal principle of intelligibility. This is why Baudril...