Symbolic Exchange and DeathSAGE, 2016年12月15日 - 280 頁 Jean Baudrillard is one of the most celebrated and most controversial of contemporary social theorists. This major work occupies a central place in the rethinking of the humanities and social sciences around the idea of postmodernism.
This English translation begins with a new introductory essay. |
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... Primitive Order 1. Symbolic/Real/Imaginary 2. The Inevitable Exchange 3. The Unconscious and the Primitive Order 4. The Double and the Split Political Economy and Death The Death Drive Death in Bataille My Death is Everywhere, my Death ...
... primitive societies to bear on Marxism and psychoanalysis' (1975: 108) as well as political economy as a whole (see below). Baudrillard calls this new mode of work fatal theory. It is clear, then, that the idea of the symbolic is ...
... primitive societies where the symbolic order rules, there is no real, no necessity, no production, no scarcity, no unconscious, no law (see 1975: 60). It gradually becomes clear that Baudrillard's programme involves the elaboration of a ...
Jean Baudrillard. confined to socalled primitive societies. Indeed, he adopts Durkheim's thesis that these processes are constraining just as consumption is constraining and not to be analysed as the free play of individual choice ...
... order (the obligation of gift over the cash nexus) while witnessing the apparent destruction of the former by the latter. Against the Marxists, Baudrillard appears more radical, and more primitive. But there are surprises. Baudrillard does.