postmodernism - Baudrillard http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/taxonomy/term/172/0 en Edelman & Baudrillard http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/221 <p>I'm not sure how I feel about Edelman's use of Baudrillard, especially the sentence "And all this [the human race slipping into the void] because (heterosexual) sex has "become extraneous, a useless function"" (65). First, I read Baudrillard as opposing two types of death: the death of the individual versus a second death, which is really more like deathlessness, that comes from identicality.</p> <p><a href="http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/221">read more</a></p> http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/221#comments Baudrillard Death edelman Mon, 03 Dec 2007 11:07:26 +0000 aha 221 at http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007 edelman on baudrillard http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/217 <p>Edelman's interpretation of Baudrillard's "The Final Solution"* resonated with what I've read in Baudrillard's book America.</p> <p><a href="http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/217">read more</a></p> http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/217#comments Baudrillard edelman Mon, 03 Dec 2007 07:17:38 +0000 oh brother 217 at http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007 gender performance http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/180 <p>Before reading The Psychic Life of Power, I had often thought of the performance of drag as a sort of simulacrum.</p> <p><a href="http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/180">read more</a></p> http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/180#comments Baudrillard Butler drag gender Mon, 19 Nov 2007 07:01:07 +0000 oh brother 180 at http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007 Teenager Steals virtual furniture, gets jailed http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/164 <p>I don't quite know what to make of this. A Dutch teenager has stolen 4,000 euros worth of virtual furniture from the virtual social networking site, Habbo Hotel . . . and he's been arrested for it. </p> <p><a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7094764.stm" title="http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7094764.stm">http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7094764.stm</a></p> <p>I keep thinking of Baudrillard's claim about how subversion in the simulacrum is more complicit than that in the real . . . where does this fall?</p> <p><a href="http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/164">read more</a></p> http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/164#comments Baudrillard simulacrum virtual theft zizek Wed, 14 Nov 2007 17:53:40 +0000 es23 164 at http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007 Foucault and simulacrum http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/106 <p>While trying to get a grasp on Foucault's position on power, I was very intrigued by his negation of the "juridico-discursive" model of power. This maintains that there is always a negative relationship between sex and power where power's ultimate objective is to suppress sex. Of course, Foucault adamently contradicts this belief throughout the book as he claims that power works to bring sex into discourse. Rather than supressing sex, power wishes to approach it in a more controlled manner.</p> <p><a href="http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/106">read more</a></p> http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/106#comments Baudrillard juridico-discursive power simulacrum Mon, 29 Oct 2007 05:54:59 +0000 snaggle 106 at http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007 Beaubourg and architectures role http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/95 <p>Reading "The Beaubourg Effect: Implosion and Deterrence," I couldn't help but feel like Baudrillard needs to chill out a little. His hysterical writing gets a bit out of hand! But he makes some interesting observations about the Beaubourg, in relation to architecture, its role, and mass culture. Additionally, he hints at the whole art debate we talked about earlier with Derrida, Lyotard, etc.</p> <p><a href="http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/95">read more</a></p> http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/95#comments Architecture art Baudrillard beaubourg hyperreal Mon, 15 Oct 2007 19:38:08 +0000 es23 95 at http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007 homogeneous space-time and the hypermarket http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/94 <p>"The hypermarket is already...the model of all future forms of controlled socialization: retotalization in a homogeneous space-time of all the dispersed functions of the body, and of social life...; retranscription of the contradictory fluxes in terms of integrated circuits; space-time of a whole operational simulation of social life, of a whole structure of living and traffic." (76)</p> <p>How does this statement map onto considerations of space &amp; time in Harvey and Jameson?</p> <p><a href="http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/94">read more</a></p> http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/94#comments Baudrillard harvey space time Mon, 15 Oct 2007 19:36:04 +0000 oh brother 94 at http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007 social order http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/92 <p>What is a non-simulacric social order and when did it exist?</p> <p><a href="http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/92">read more</a></p> http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/92#comments Baudrillard social order Mon, 15 Oct 2007 18:05:45 +0000 morefuntocompute 92 at http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007 what if we're not 'really' afraid of nuclear war? http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/91 <p>Beginning on p.39, Baud delves into his analysis of the psychology of nuclear might, arguing that acquiring the tangible means for nuclear warfare will never result in the 'real' deployment of these weapons. Acquiring nuclear weapons is to acquire the deterrent. Because they can, they will not. Hence, deterrence, in Baudrillard's account. Global acquisition (and consumption) of this deterrent is "an accelerated process of implosion."</p> <p><a href="http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/91">read more</a></p> http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/91#comments Baudrillard fear nuclear power simulation Mon, 15 Oct 2007 16:58:37 +0000 Anonymous 91 at http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007 Simulacra and Simulation http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/90 <p>I thought the section on the Holocaust was particularly interesting, and somewhat daring to talk about. He seems to essentially be saying that television has transformed this tragedy into a cold, televised memory and because of this, this history has been exterminated.</p> <p><a href="http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/90">read more</a></p> http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007/node/90#comments Baudrillard Holocaust Simulacra and simulation Mon, 15 Oct 2007 08:44:20 +0000 CA92075 90 at http://machines.kfitz.info/149-2007