Contributions

  • Dominic Pettman - Introduction
  • Philippe Beitchman - Translator
  • W. G. J. Niesluchowski - Translator
  • MIT Press - Distributors
  • Jim Fleming - Editor
and 4 more
  • Matt Fishbeck - Cover Art
  • Marine Baudrillard - Cover Photographer
  • Hedi El Kholti - Designer
  • Fleming, Jim - Contributor

Publication

2008 - Semiotext(e), Los Angeles, USA, California

Language

English

Translation of: Les stratégies fatales

Word Count

59,000 words, Guess

Page Count

236 pages

Identifiers

Classifications

  • LCCHN16 .B3813 2008

Description

When Fatal Strategies was first published in French in 1983, it represented a turning point for Jean Baudrillard: an utterly original, and for many readers, utterly bizarre book that offered a theory as proliferative, ecstatic, and hallucinatory as the postmodern world it endeavored to describe. Arguing against the predetermined outcomes of dialectical thought with his renowned,wry, ambivalent passion, with this volume Jean Baudrillard mounted an attack against the false problems posed by Western philosophy. If his Marxist days were firmly behind him, Baudrillard here indicated that metaphysics had also gone the way of sociology and politics: the contemporary world demanded nothing less than Pataphysics, Alfred Jarry's absurdist philosophy that described the laws of the universe supplementary to this one. In effect, with Fatal Strategies, Baudrillard became Baudrillard. In his extrapolationist manner, Baudrillard sought to replace Western philosophy's circular arguments with a ritualistic Theater of Cruelty. Using this line of thought developed in Fatal Strategies, Baudrillard went on, throughout the 1980s, to find new and shatteringly accurate ways of discussing American corporatocracy, arms build-up, and hostage taking. Fatal Strategies asserts a profound critique of American politics, and it is an important step towards his examination of evil.Jean Baudrillard (1929-2007) was a philosopher, sociologist, cultural critic,and theorist of postmodernity who challenged all existing theories of contemporary society with humor and precision. An outsider in the French intellectual establishment, he was internationally renowned as a twenty-first century visionary, reporter, and provocateur. His Simulations (1983) instantly became a cult classic and made him a controversial voice in the world of politics and art.

First Sentence

THINGS HAVE FOUND A WAY of avoiding a dialectics of meaning that was beginning to bore them: by proliferating indefinitely, increasing their potential, outbidding themselves in an ascension to the limit, an obscenity that henceforth becomes their immanent finality and senseless reason.

Subjects

Series Statement

  • Foreign agents

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