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Baudrillard: Critical and Fatal Theory

Routledge (1991)

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  1. In the shadow of the deconstructed metanarratives : Baudrillard, Latour and the end of realist epistemology.Steven C. Ward - 1994 - History of the Human Sciences 7 (4):73-94.
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  • The Tao of Exchange: Ideology and Cosmology in Baudrillard's Fatalism.Raymond L. M. Lee - 1998 - Thesis Eleven 52 (1):53-67.
    Baudrillard's fatalism could be interpreted as a unique synthesis of poststructuralism and Eastern philosophy. It may be construed as an effort to integrate the critique of the political economy of the sign with a romantic anthropology of symbolic exchange that is partly influenced by Taoist philosophy. As a whole, it comprises a type of countercultural response to a burgeoning simulacral order. This is a response that draws upon some aspects of Taoist thought because it ideally provides a non-Marxist approach to (...)
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  • A critique of Baudrillard's hyperreality: Towards a sociology of postmodernism.Anthony King - 1998 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 24 (6):47-66.
    Through the critical examination of Baudrillard's concept of hyperreality, this article seeks to make a wider contribution to contempor ary debates about postmodernism. It draws on a post-Cartesian, Heideg gerian philosophy to demonstrate the weakness of the concept of hyperreality and reveal its foundation in a Cartesian epistemology. The article goes on to claim that this same Heideggerian tradition suggests a way in which the concept of hyperreality and nihilistic postmodern sociologies more generally might be dialectically superseded. Instead of these (...)
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  • Jean Baudrillard.Douglas Kellner - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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  • Fatal objects: Lacan in Baudrillard vol 2.Francesco Proto - unknown
    Jean Baudrillard's 3rd simulation stage reinterpreted through the theory of architecture, Marxism and Jaques Lacan.
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  • The Invention of History: Baudrillard in Lacan vol 1 (1st simulation stage: the classic age).Francesco Proto - unknown
    Jean Baudrillard's first simulation stage re-interpreted in the light of architectural theory and psychoanalysis.
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  • Realised recordings: how documentary structures question the communication, construction and memory of the Real of past occurrences.Andrew Gerrard Lennon - unknown
    This thesis offers a comparison of documentary case studies to explore how moments from reality are recorded and how future representations of them can offer or instigate a parallax to create a new or different way of understanding the occurrence of such moments and how they have been remembered. I postulate that this shift in perspective offers an interaction with reality through a reconfiguration of the Real of these moments. The study will consider this assertion in relation to Žižek’s and (...)
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