Jean Baudrillard, Art and Artefact
Edited by:
- Nicholas Zurbrugg - De Montfort University, Leicester, UK
November 1997 | 208 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
This book offers a major reappraisal of Jean Baudrillard's thoughts on the image, radical illusion and media culture.
Here for the first time, through a number of highly accessible interviews and recent essays, Baudrillard introduces what he calls the `stunning clarity' of the photographic, and fascinatingly outlines his present thoughts on urban reality, aesthetics, virtual reality and new media technologies, in the light of his practice as a photographer.
The book is illustrated with eight colour plates of Baudrillard's photographs and includes a number of provocative and illuminating responses to his recent writings from noted Baudrillard scholars. It also includes a definitive bibliography of critical responses to Baudrillard's writings on media culture, art and photography.
Nicholas Zurbrugg
Introduction
Jean Baudrillard
Objects, Images and the Possibilities of Aesthetic Illusion
Jean Baudrillard
Aesthetic Illusion and Virtual Reality
Jean Baudrillard
The Art of Disappearance
Jean Baudrillard interviewed by Nicholas Zurbrugg
The Ecstasy of Photography
Jean Baudrillard interviewed by Rex Butler
Baudrillard's List
Rex Butler
Jean Baudrillard's Defence of the Real
Alan Cholodenko
`Objects in Mirror are Closer Than They Appear'
Graham Coulter-Smith
Between Marx and Derrida
Gary Genosko
Who Is the `French McLuhan'?
Paul Patton
This Is Not a War
Anne-Marie Willis
After the Afterimage of Jean Baudrillard
Nicholas Zurbrugg
Baudrillard, Barthes, Burroughs and `Absolute' Photography
Richard G Smith
Following Baudrillard