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Jean Baudrillard is famous for his investigations into hyperreality, and in particular hyperreality in America. According to Baudrillard, America has constructed itself a world that is more "real" than Real, and where those inhabiting it are obsessed with timelessness, perfection, and objectification of the self. Furthermore, authenticity has been replaced by copy (thus reality is replaced by a substitute), and nothing is "real," though those engaged in the illusion are incapable of seeing it. Instead of having experiences, people observe spectacle s, via real or metaphorical control screens . Instead of the real, we have simulation and simulacra.
Shortly before the Gulf War, Baudrillard predicted that the war would not actually happen. After the war, he claimed he had been correct, and that no war had taken place. The reality of the war, where people fight for a cause and are killed, had been replaced by a 'copy' war that is delivered to televisions across the world where no fighting is taking place. America was engaged in an illusion that it was fighting, much as the mind engages with a video game, where the experience tricks the consciousness into believing it is an active participant in something that is not happening. So while the combat may have been real, only a few people experienced it and they were on the other side of the world. The 'war' that was broadcast on television, and therefore the war as it is understood by the majority of people, was not actually real.
Baudrillard was heavily influenced by the work of Karl Marx. Like many other philosophers of consumer society, Baudrillard was particularly influenced with Marx's discussion of commodity fetishism, and much of his earlier work was an attempt to re-articulate the logic of commodity fetishism through a post-Marxist frame of reference that took seriously twentieth century developments in linguistic structuralism. Part of this rearticulation involved what Baudrillard called the "four logics of objects." He developed four categories for the value of commodities:
In his essay the Precession of the Simulacra, Baudrillard recalls a tale by Borges in which a map (i.e. a representation) is produced so detailed that it ends up coming into one-to-one correspondence with the territory (i.e. everything that had once been directly lived), but argues that in the postmodern epoch, the territory ceases to exist, and there is nothing left but the map; or indeed, the very concepts of the map and the territory have become indistinguishable, the distinction which once existed between them having been erased.
Baudrillard was criticized by many scholars. In the book Fashionable Nonsense, Sokal and Bricmont criticize Baudrillard for using scientific terminology that he does not understand. And Douglas Kellner offers a critique of Baudrillard in Jean Baudrillard: From Marxism to Postmodernism and Beyond (BooksEnthsiast.com) that attempts to defend traditional Marxism from Baudrillard's critique. And Christopher Norris attacked what he saw as Baudrillard's lack of meaningful political engagement in Uncritical Theory : Postmodernism, Intellectuals and the Gulf War (BooksEnthsiast.com).