8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Difficult reading, but interesting insights (sometimes swallowed up by verbiage), January 1, 2007
This review is from: Simulations (Foreign Agents Series) (Paperback)
Jean Baudrillard, postmodern thinker, despairs; he claims, in "Forget Foucault," that there is an "impossibility of any politics" in our current situation. An important part of this context are media simulations, of reality so obscured by the play of images completely unrelated to any "reality" which might be out there that we are hopelessly incapable of arriving at any judgments on which to base political decisions and actions. Images on television and in the movies and in other media are "floating signifiers," having no real connection to concrete referents. The key concept associated with Baudrillard is simulations and the simulacrum. He begins by quoting Ecclesiastes: "The simulacrum is never that which conceals the truth--it is the truth that conceals that there is none. The simulacrum is true" (by the way, this quotation may be a simulacrum; I could not find it in Ecclesiastes!). Simulations began historically as replicas of the real, as reflections of "reality." However, with time, simulations have become increasingly detached from concrete "real" references. Simulations do not have reference points or substance or any tie to "reality." Simulations have become "a real without origin or reality"--a hyperreal. We face a procession of images and simulations, and lose sight of the simple fact that they are "floating signifiers." The simulacra become real for us.
Put in post-structural (or postmodern) terms, the models created are floating signifiers (simulations in Baudrillard's terms) which structure people's discourse with one another and shape their behavior. Images become crucial in politics. After presidential debates or major policy speeches or elections, the "spin patrol" gets going. These are the spokespersons of the parties or candidates who try to convince the audience that their simulations of the event are better than their opponents' simulations. In the process, no one particularly cares what actually happened or what was said. It is the simulations pushed by the various actors that become the news.
Baudrillard's writing is challenging; many will write him off as an unreadable crank. Nonetheless, the underlying concept of the simulacrum is fascinating and generates much reflection. This is a postmodern work that may actually speak to some real world issues. . . .
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Did anyone bother to proofread or copyedit this book?, May 4, 2011
This review is from: Simulations (Foreign Agents Series) (Paperback)
The experience of reading Baudrillard always involves masochism and requires a sense of humor, but this manuscript went to print in an appalling state. These are not items lost in translation, but periods in the place of commas, 'out' used instead of 'our', things being 'curcumscribed' etc. - Things that undermine the text every five or six pages. This book has been distributed by MIT since the early 1980s and its amazing that it went to print in this state, and that no one has corrected the text.
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3.0 out of 5 stars
Tough, But Fascinating, June 2, 2011
This review is from: Simulations (Foreign Agents Series) (Paperback)
This is a tough read, but the philosophy behind it is brilliant. It says so much about how brains process information and form cognitive thought for greater reasoning.
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