Search results for ""Author Jean Baudrillard""
POR QU NO HA DESAPARECIDO TODO AN
Hablemos del mundo, del cual el hombre ha desaparecido. Se trata de desaparición, y no de agotamiento, extinción o exterminio. El agotamiento de los recursos y la extinción de las especies son procesos físicos o fenómenos naturales. Y toda la diferencia radica en que es muy probable que la especie humana sea la única en haber inventado un modo específico de desaparición, que no tiene nada que ver con la ley de la naturaleza. Quizás incluso un arte de la desaparición. En "Por qué no ha desaparecido todo aún?" se trata de la fotografía como el epítome de las relaciones de poder en la sociedad occidental. En "Carnaval y Caníbal" se analiza la farsa de la historia como el paso final del sistema representativo y su exportación al resto del mundo.
£14.27
La agona del poder Spanish Edition
En La agonía del poder reaparece el Baudrillard más comprometido con la demolición de los ídolos que dominan los inicios del nuevo milenio. El filósofo francés arremete contra el consumismo, la metástasis de la imagen, o el papel simbólico que desempeña Occidente en el mundo actual. La obra se compone de dos textos: El juego del antagonismo mundial o la agonía del poder y Violencia de la imagen. Violencia contra la imagen, que recogen las dos conferencias que impartió Baudrillard en su última visita a Madrid, en noviembre de 2005.El desafío de la confrontación mundial, escribe Jean Baudrillard, se reduce al reto que hemos lanzado a las otras culturas para que se adhieran a nuestro proceso de hundimiento de todos los valores. No es exactamente un choque de civilizaciones ni un conflicto puramente económico o político. Se trata de un desafío de orden simbólico: una aniquilación física y mental, una carnavalización universal que Occidente impone al precio de su propia humillación y de
£11.02
Merve Verlag GmbH Die Illusion des Endes oderDerStreikderEreignisse
£15.00
Matthes & Seitz Verlag Im Schatten der schweigenden Mehrheit oder das Ende des Sozialen
£14.80
Ediciones CÃtedra De La Seduccion Seduction Teorema Theorem
£18.45
Passagen Verlag Ges.M.B.H Einzigartige Objekte Architektur und Philosophie
£18.50
Matthes & Seitz Verlag Das radikale Denken
£10.00
Campus Verlag GmbH Das System der Dinge ber unser Verhltnis zu den alltglichen Gegenstnden
£25.20
John Wiley and Sons Ltd Cool Memories II: 1987 - 1990
This is the third in a series of personal records in hyper-reality from France's provocative philosopher of postmodernity,
£45.00
Verso Books For a Critique of the Political Economy of the Sign
What if the problems of modern society don't come from production, but rather consumption and the system of cultural signs? In this classic work from the defining intellectual of the postmodern, Jean Baudrillard, For a Critique of the Political Economy of the Sign takes Marx's critique of political economy and its analysis of the commodity form as the starting point for an analysis of signs and their meaning in modern society. Influenced by Lefebvre's critique of everyday life, Barthes's semiology, and Situationism, Baudrillard analyses how objects are encoded within the system of signs and meanings that constitute contemporary media and consumer societies. Combining semiological studies and sociology of the consumer society, For a Critique of the Political Economy of the Sign contains Baudrillard's most extensive engagement with Marxism and shows him at a critical juncture for the development of his thought.
£13.92
Sage Publications Ltd Symbolic Exchange and Death
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. It leads the reader on an exhilarating tour encompassing the end of Marxism, the enchantment of fashion, symbolism about sex and the body, and the relations between economic exchange and death. Most significantly, the book represents Baudrillard′s fullest elaboration of the concept of the three orders of the simulacra, defining the historical passage from production to reproduction to simulation. A classic in its field, Symbolic Exchange and Death is a key source for the redefinition of contemporary social thought. Baudrillard′s critical gaze appraises social theories as diverse as cybernetics, ethnography, psychoanalysis, feminism, Marxism, communications theory and semiotics. This English translation begins with a new introductory essay.
£47.48
Amorrortu Editores El pacto de lucidez o La inteligencia del mal
La desaparición de Dios nos ha dejado frente a la realidad. Qué ocurrirá con la desaparición de la realidad?Cabe preguntarse si es este un destino negativo o simplemente una ausencia de destino, es decir, el surgimiento de una banalidad implacable ligada al cálculo integral de la realidad. El destino no ha dicho su última palabra. Se lo puede sentir en el corazón mismo de esa reali- zación integral, en el corazón del poder, en esa convulsión interna que sigue su lógica y pre- cipita sus efectos, en ese vuelco maléfico de la estructura que transforma una destinación po- sitiva en una finalidad asesina: aquí se encuentra el principio del Mal y aquí debe intervenir la inteligencia del Mal.O sea, dos movimientos antagónicos:Realidad Integral: movimiento irreversible de totalización del mundo.Forma Dual: reversibilidad interna al movimiento irreversible de lo real.Parecería que la evolución (o la involución) hacia un universo integral es irresistible. Pero al mismo tiemp
£17.46
Merve Verlag GmbH Agonie des Realen
£10.11
Passagen Verlag Ges.M.B.H Die Intelligenz des Bsen
£23.50
Sage Publications Ltd The Consumer Society: Myths and Structures
Jean Baudrillard′s classic text was one of the first to focus on the process and meaning of consumption in contemporary culture. Originally published in 1970, the book makes a vital contribution to current debates on consumption. The book includes Baudrillard′s most organized discussion of mass media culture, the meaning of leisure, and anomie in affluent society. A chapter on the body demonstrates Baudrillard′s extraordinary prescience for flagging vital subjects in contemporary culture long before others. This English translation begins with a new introductory essay.
£42.28
Siglo XXI de España Editores, S.A. La sociedad de consumo sus mitos sus estructuras
El libro de Jean Baudrillard, La sociedad de consumo, es una contribución magistral a la sociología contemporánea que, ciertamente, ya tiene su lugar en el linaje de obras tales como La división del trabajo de Durkheim, La teoría de la clase ociosa de Veblen o La muchedumbre solitaria de David Riesman.Baudrillard analiza las sociedades occidentales contemporáneas, incluida la de los Estados Unidos, y se concentra en el fenómeno del consumo de objetos, tema que ya abordó en El sistema de los objetos. En la conclusión de ese volumen, ya formulaba el plan de la presente obra: Hay que plantear claramente desde el comienzo que el consumo es un modo activo de relacionarse (no sólo con los objetos, sino con la comunidad y con el mundo), un modo de actividad sistemática y de respuesta global en el cual se funda todo nuestro sistema cultural.La sociedad de consumo, escrito en un estilo conciso, es un libro que las jóvenes generaciones deberían estudiar cuidadosamente pues posiblemente le
£21.06
Matthes & Seitz Verlag Amerika
£12.80
Matthes & Seitz Verlag Der symbolische Tausch und der Tod
£20.00
University of Minnesota Press The Singular Objects of Architecture
What is a singular object? An idea, a building, a color, a sentiment, a human being. Each in turn comes under scrutiny in this exhilarating dialogue between two of the most interesting thinkers working in philosophy and architecture today. From such singular objects, Jean Baudrillard and Jean Nouvel move on to fundamental problems of politics, identity, and aesthetics as their exchange becomes an imaginative exploration of the possibilities of modern architecture and the future of modern life. Among the topics the two speakers take up are the city of tomorrow and the ideal of transparency, the gentrification of New York City and Frank Gehry’s surprising Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao. As Nouvel prompts Baudrillard to reflect on some of his signature concepts (the virtual, transparency, fatal strategies, oblivion, and seduction, among others), the confrontation between such philosophical concerns and the specificity of architecture gives rise to novel and striking formulations—and a new way of establishing and understanding the connections between the practitioner and the philosopher, the object and the idea. This wide-ranging conversation builds a bridge between the fields of architecture and philosophy. At the same time it offers readers an intimate view of the meeting of objects and ideas in which the imagined, constructed, and inhabited environment is endlessly changing, forever evolving. Jean Baudrillard is one of the most influential thinkers of his generation and author of The Vital Illusion (2001). Jean Nouvel has designed buildings throughout the world, including the new Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis, and is a recipient of France’s Grand Prix d’Architecture. Robert Bononno, a translator and teacher, lives in New York City.
£14.99
Sage Publications Ltd The Consumer Society: Myths and Structures
Jean Baudrillard′s classic text was one of the first to focus on the process and meaning of consumption in contemporary culture. Originally published in 1970, the book makes a vital contribution to current debates on consumption. The book includes Baudrillard′s most organized discussion of mass media culture, the meaning of leisure, and anomie in affluent society. A chapter on the body demonstrates Baudrillard′s extraordinary prescience for flagging vital subjects in contemporary culture long before others. This English translation begins with a new introductory essay.
£119.00
John Wiley and Sons Ltd Cool Memories V: 2000 - 2004
Prophet of the apocalypse, hysterical lyric poet, obsessive recounter of the desolation of the postmodern scene and currently the hottest property on the New York intellectual circuit. The Guardian A sharp-shooting lone-ranger from the post-Marxist left. New York Times The most important French thinker of the past twenty years. J. G. Ballard "Theory is never so fine as when it takes the form of a fiction or a fable," writes Baudrillard in Cool Memories V – the latest in a series of aphoristic journals that covers the period 2000-2004. During these years Baudrillard re-emerged strongly in the international arena with his trenchant and controversial essay Spirit of Terrorism, developed his work as a photographer and developed cancer. As his attack on the inanities of "hyperreality" has grown more radical, Baudrillard has come to display an ever more marked penchant for the aphoristic style he has so long admired in such writers as Canetti, Lichtenberg and Nietzsche. "'Aphorizein'", he writes, "from which we get the word ‘aphorism', means to retreat to such a distance that a horizon of thought is formed which never again closes on itself. " Cool Memories are carnets, notebooks, but these are notes for keeping the horizon of thought open within a daunting sphere of ideas that is no less than "a jungle, a nature red in tooth and claw. " "Mentally and affectively," he writes, "we have remained hunters. At every moment, in thought and writing, there is a prey and a predator. And survival is a miracle. " Jean Baudrillard was born in Reims in 1929 and now lives in Paris. From 1966 to1987 he taught sociology at the University of Paris X (Nanterre). Among his works translated into English are Simulations and Simulacra, Fatal Strategies, Seduction, America, Cool Memories I- IV, The Illusion of the End and The Spirit of Terrorism
£16.74
Verso Books The System of Objects
The System of Objects is a tour de force-a theoretical letter-in-a-bottle tossed into the ocean in 1968, which brilliantly communicates to us all the live ideas of the day-offering a cultural critique of the commodity in consumer society.
£16.95
John Wiley and Sons Ltd Exiles from Dialogue
Not long ago, two friends Jean Baudrillard and Enrique Valiente Noailles the one having come from Buenos Aires, the other from nowhere, met in Paris. They had a long discussion without any precise aim. It was, rather, a way of rubbing up against metaphysics without risk of contagion. They called it Exiles from Dialogue as a mirrored homage to Bertolt Brecht and shortly afterwards they parted company and went their separate ways. In this remarkable new book based on this gnomic meeting, Baudrillard and Noailles range over the entirety of philosophy and thought underpinning Baudrillards unique work, from In the Shadow of the Silent Majorities (1983) to his recent writings on 9/11. Philosophically, the book takes in its breadth Heraclitus to Wittgenstein by way of Plato, Aristotle, Kant, Hegel, Kierkegaard and Nietzche. Its literary sources are diverse: Gracian and Saul Bellow, Hlderlin and Stanislaw Lec; and the theories of Fukuyama, Barthes and Kristeva are weighed, considered and analysed. With his usual incandescent brilliance, Baudrillard discusses the central themes of his writing: thought as (non-prophetic) anticipation; tragic acceptance of the world; the disappearance of the world into simulation; the death of the social (and with it the Left). Vitally, Baudrillard corrects some of the misconceptions that plague his work (about his fatal strategies, for example), qualifies some of his bolder pronouncements (notably softening his position on the question of the virtual) and pushes other lines of thinking further than ever before. Razor-sharp, volatile and capacious, this book will be essential reading for students and scholars of Baudrillard and those interested in the theories and philosophies that currently abound and rebound in the social sciences and humanities.
£15.99
Duke University Press Cool Memories II, 1987-1990
Jean Baudrillard is widely recognized as one of the most important and provocative writers of our age. Variously termed “France’s leading philosopher of postmodernism” and “a sharp-shooting Lone Ranger of the post-Marxist left,” he might also be called our leading philosopher of seduction or of mass culture. Following his acclaimed America and Cool Memories, this book is the third in a series of personal records in hyperreality. Idiosyncratic, outrageous, and brilliantly original, Baudrillard here casts his net widely and combines autobiographical memories with further reflections on America, the crisis of cultural production, new ideas in fiction/theory, and the “verbal fornication” of the postmodern. In this wide-ranging discussion of events and ideas, Baudrillard moves between poetry and waterfalls, strikes and stealth bombers, Freud and La Cicciolina, shadows and simulacra, deconstruction and the zodiac, Reagan’s smile and Kennedy’s death, the “curse” on South America and the future of the West, the last tango of French intellectual life and the exemplary disappearing act of Italian politics. Writing at the site where the philosophic and the poetic merge, he once again offers us commentary in the form of the riveting insight, the short distillation of reality that establishes its truth with the force of recognition. Cool Memories II, Baudrillard’s latest commentary on the technopresent and future, an installment of his reflections on the reality of contemporary western culture, will entice all readers concerned with postmodernism and the current state of theory.
£18.99
£16.99
Autonomedia The Agony of Power
£12.99
Autonomedia Radical Alterity
£13.99
John Wiley and Sons Ltd Cool Memories V: 2000 - 2004
Prophet of the apocalypse, hysterical lyric poet, obsessive recounter of the desolation of the postmodern scene and currently the hottest property on the New York intellectual circuit. The Guardian A sharp-shooting lone-ranger from the post-Marxist left. New York Times The most important French thinker of the past twenty years. J. G. Ballard "Theory is never so fine as when it takes the form of a fiction or a fable," writes Baudrillard in Cool Memories V – the latest in a series of aphoristic journals that covers the period 2000-2004. During these years Baudrillard re-emerged strongly in the international arena with his trenchant and controversial essay Spirit of Terrorism, developed his work as a photographer and developed cancer. As his attack on the inanities of "hyperreality" has grown more radical, Baudrillard has come to display an ever more marked penchant for the aphoristic style he has so long admired in such writers as Canetti, Lichtenberg and Nietzsche. "'Aphorizein'", he writes, "from which we get the word ‘aphorism', means to retreat to such a distance that a horizon of thought is formed which never again closes on itself. " Cool Memories are carnets, notebooks, but these are notes for keeping the horizon of thought open within a daunting sphere of ideas that is no less than "a jungle, a nature red in tooth and claw. " "Mentally and affectively," he writes, "we have remained hunters. At every moment, in thought and writing, there is a prey and a predator. And survival is a miracle. " Jean Baudrillard was born in Reims in 1929 and now lives in Paris. From 1966 to1987 he taught sociology at the University of Paris X (Nanterre). Among his works translated into English are Simulations and Simulacra, Fatal Strategies, Seduction, America, Cool Memories I- IV, The Illusion of the End and The Spirit of Terrorism
£45.00
Columbia University Press The Jean Baudrillard Reader
Jean Baudrillard (1929-2007) was a controversial social and cultural theorist known for his trenchant analyses of media and technological communication. Belonging to the generation of French thinkers that included Gilles Deleuze, Jean-Francois Lyotard, Michel Foucault, and Jacques Lacan, Baudrillard has at times been vilified by his detractors, but the influence of his work on critical thought and pop culture is impossible to deny (many might recognize his name from The Matrix movies, which claimed to be based on the French theorist's ideas). Steve Redhead takes a fresh look at Baudrillard in relation to the intellectual and political climates in which he wrote. Baudrillard sought to produce a theory of modernity, but the modern world of the 1950s was radically different from the reality of the early twenty-first century. Beginning with Baudrillard's initial publications in the 1960s and concluding with his writings on 9/11 and Abu Ghraib, Redhead guides the reader through Baudrillard's difficult texts and unorthodox views on current issues. He also proposes an original theory of Baudrillard's relation to postmodernism, presenting the theorist's work as "non-postmodernist," after Bruno Latour's concept of "non-modernity." Each section of the Reader includes an extract from one of Baudrillard's writings, prefaced by a short bibliographical introduction that places the piece in context and puts the debate surrounding the theorist into sharp perspective. The conflict over Baudrillard's legacy stems largely from the fact that a comprehensive selection of his writings has yet to be translated and collected into one volume. The Jean Baudrillard Reader provides an expansive and much-needed portrait of the critic's resonant work.
£79.20
Semiotext (E) Fatal Strategies, new edition
£13.23
John Wiley and Sons Ltd Exiles from Dialogue
Not long ago, two friends Jean Baudrillard and Enrique Valiente Noailles the one having come from Buenos Aires, the other from nowhere, met in Paris. They had a long discussion without any precise aim. It was, rather, a way of rubbing up against metaphysics without risk of contagion. They called it Exiles from Dialogue as a mirrored homage to Bertolt Brecht and shortly afterwards they parted company and went their separate ways. In this remarkable new book based on this gnomic meeting, Baudrillard and Noailles range over the entirety of philosophy and thought underpinning Baudrillards unique work, from In the Shadow of the Silent Majorities (1983) to his recent writings on 9/11. Philosophically, the book takes in its breadth Heraclitus to Wittgenstein by way of Plato, Aristotle, Kant, Hegel, Kierkegaard and Nietzche. Its literary sources are diverse: Gracian and Saul Bellow, Hlderlin and Stanislaw Lec; and the theories of Fukuyama, Barthes and Kristeva are weighed, considered and analysed. With his usual incandescent brilliance, Baudrillard discusses the central themes of his writing: thought as (non-prophetic) anticipation; tragic acceptance of the world; the disappearance of the world into simulation; the death of the social (and with it the Left). Vitally, Baudrillard corrects some of the misconceptions that plague his work (about his fatal strategies, for example), qualifies some of his bolder pronouncements (notably softening his position on the question of the virtual) and pushes other lines of thinking further than ever before. Razor-sharp, volatile and capacious, this book will be essential reading for students and scholars of Baudrillard and those interested in the theories and philosophies that currently abound and rebound in the social sciences and humanities.
£50.00
£15.99
Autonomedia Simulations
£11.99
Autonomedia In the Shadow of the Silent Majorities
£18.21
Autonomedia The Ecstasy of Communication
£14.99
Verso Books America
From the sierras of New Mexico to the streets of New York and LA by night-"a sort of luminous, geometric, incandescent immensity"-Baudrillard mixes aperçus and observations with a wicked sense of fun to provide a unique insight into the country that dominates our world. In this new edition, leading cultural critic and novelist Geoff Dyer offers a thoughtful and perceptive take on the continued resonance of Baudrillard's America.
£14.67
£14.99