Description
Book Synopsis''Baudrillard and the Media'' is the first in-depth critical study of Jean Baudrillard''s media theory. Rejecting the common positioning of Baudrillard within the discipline as a postmodernist it argues instead for the necessity of a fuller reading of his ideas and critical project.
Merrin offers an overview and evaluation of his key arguments and themes, focusing especially upon the organising principle of his work: his theory of symbolic exchange and critique of the semiotic and of simulation. Upon this basis the book also resituates Baudrillard within media theory, developing an original, critical re-reading of his relationship with McLuhanism and arguing for the significance instead of hitherto neglected influences such as Boorstin.
Emphasizing his critical value and contemporary relevance, ''Baudrillard and the Media'' also provides the most detailed exploration yet of Baudrillard''s theory of the non-event, considering its applicability thro
Trade Review
‘Finally we have a book-length study of Baudrillard’s writing from the vantage point of media studies. Merrin is an excellent guide to what is arguably the central thread in the work of the theorist of simulations.’ – Mark Poster, University of California, Irvine
‘William Merrin has written a significant and original book that will transform conventional understandings of Jean Baudrillard’s alleged "postmodern" media theory. His radical Durkheimian interpretation, critique and conclusions will be seriously debated in media and communications studies and deserved so. Baudrillard and the Media is essential reading for anyone interested in Baudrillard or contemporary theories of media and simulation, symbolic exchange and semiotics.’ –John Armitage, Northumbria University
Table of ContentsAcknowledgements
Introduction: 'There is No Theory of the Media': Baudrillard and Media Studies
1. Television is Killing the Art of Symbolic Exchange: Baudrillard's Theory of Communication
2. To Play With Phantoms: The Evil Demon of the Simulacrum
3. Are Friends Electric?: Baudrillard's Critique of McLuhan
4. The Delirious Spectacle of the Non-Event
5. Shreds of War Rotting in the Desert
6. 'Total Screen': 9/11 and The Gulf War: Reloaded
7. 'The Matrix Has You': Virtuality and Social Control
8. 'The Saving Power': The 'Reflex Miracle' of Photography
Conclusion: 'Speculation to the Death': Baudrillard's Theoretical Violence
Notes
References
Index