Radical Illusion. (A Game Against)

Authors

  • Alexander R. Galloway New York University. Green Street, 239, New York, USA
  • Mira Sultanova RAS Institute of Philosophy, Gonsharnaya St. 12/1, Moscow 109240, Russian Federation
  • Sergey Konyaev RAS Institute of Philosophy, Gonsharnaya St. 12/1, Moscow 109240, Russian Federation

Keywords:

Baudrillard, game, play, seduction, illusion, separative cause

Abstract

There are two voices in the work of Jean Baudrillard, the early voice, which lasted less than 10 years, and the mature voice, which lasted about 30. The first voice is younger and more conventionally leftist. It was fully embedded in the intellectual debates of the late 1960s. A committed Marxist, the younger Baudrillard wrote on labor and needs, use-value and production. But after this period as a young man, Baudrillard transitioned into a very different thinker in the middle to late 1970s. He developed a whole new theoretical vocabulary that was completely in tune with that decade’s historical transformation into digitization, postindustrial economies, immaterial labor, mediation, and simulation. His theories of play and games are at the very heart of this transformation. Through a close reading of several texts, this essay explores Baudrillard’s interest in play and games through the concepts of seduction, the fatal strategy, illusion, and what he called the “principle of separation”.

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Author Biographies

  • Alexander R. Galloway, New York University. Green Street, 239, New York, USA

    Alexander R. GALLOWAY – DSc in Philosophy, New York University.

  • Mira Sultanova, RAS Institute of Philosophy, Gonsharnaya St. 12/1, Moscow 109240, Russian Federation

    Mira SULTANOVA – Ph.D in Philosophy, Senior Research Fellow at the Department of the History of Anthropological Doctrines. RAS Institute of Philosophy.

  • Sergey Konyaev, RAS Institute of Philosophy, Gonsharnaya St. 12/1, Moscow 109240, Russian Federation

    Sergey KONYAEV – PhD in Physico-mathematical sciences, Senior Research Fellow at the Department of Philosophical Problems in Natural Science. RAS Institute of Philosophy.

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Published

2016-12-29

Issue

Section

Absurdism and Human Existence

How to Cite

1. Galloway A. R. Radical Illusion. (A Game Against) // Philosophical anthropology. 2016. № 2 (2). C. 207–244.