The surrealist movement that aspired to fuse dream and reality is echoed in postmodernity by an elimination of the ultimate barrier between the real and the fake. From explosive revolution of counterculture to implosive evolution of cultural void...
...where we perceive quite naturally that they are made up of breaths from our flatulence, from meat which we make the candles and ashes, from bone with which we make false ivory and false universes.
“All of our values are simulated,” he told The New York Times in 2005. “What is freedom? We have a choice between buying one car or buying another car? It’s a simulation of freedom.”
Jean Baudrillard was that rarity of a cultural philosopher, a thinker whose reflections, refusing to be simply culturally mimetic, actually became a complex sign of the social reality of the postmodern century.
Seeking to understand them as an (ab)reaction to the technological and political expansion of capitalist globalization, rather than as a war of religiously-based or civilization-based warfare...he contrasted 9/11 to the 'non-event' of the Gulf Warby termi
Abstraction today is no longer that of the map, the double, the mirror or the concept. Simulation is no longer that of a territory, a referential being or a substance. It is the generation by models of a real without origin or reality: a hyperreal. Baudr
J. Baudrillard. Campus Studium Campus-Verl., Frankfurt/Main u.a., 2 edition, (2001)ISBN 3-593-36888-9 kart. : DM 24.80, EUR 12.90 (ab 1.1.2002), sfr 23.70, S 181.00, 261 Seiten; Jean Baudrillard. Aus dem Franz. von Joseph Garzuly. Mit einem Nachw. von Florian Rötzer.