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Jean Baudrillard. Violence of the Image. 2004. 1/9

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Uploaded by on Nov 5, 2007

http://www.egs.edu/ Jean Baudrillard thinking and talking about the violence of the image, the violence to the image, aggression, oppression, transgression, regression, effects and causes of violence, violence of the virtual, 3d, virtual reality, transparency, psychological and imaginary. Open Lecture given by Jean Baudrillard after his seminar for the students at the European Graduate School, EGS Media and Communication Program Studies Department, Saas-Fee, Switzerland, Europe, in 2004. He was expected to teach another seminar in April 2007, in Paris.‹a href="http://www.egs.edu/"›European Graduate School, Media and Communication Studies department program‹/a›

Jean Baudrillard was born to a peasant family in Reims, north-eastern France, on July 29, 1929. He became the first of his family to attend university when he moved to the Sorbonne University in Paris. There he studied German language, which led to him to begin teaching the subject at a provincial lycée, where he remained from 1958 until his departure in 1966. While he was teaching Baudrillard began to publish reviews of literature, and translated the works of such authors as Peter Weiss, Bertolt Brecht and Wilhelm Muhlmann.

Toward the end of his time as a German teacher Baudrillard began to transfer to sociology, eventually completing his doctoral thesis Le Système des objets (The System of Objects) under the tutelage of Henri Lefebvre. Subsequently, he began teaching the subject at the Université de Paris-X Nanterre, a politically radical institution (at the time) which would become heavily involved in the events of May 1968. At Nanterre he took up a position as Maître Assistant (Assistant Professor), then Maître de Conférences (Associate Professor), eventually becoming a professor after completing his habilitation, L'Autre par lui-même (The Other, by himself).

In 1986 he moved to IRIS (Institut de Recherche et d'Information Socio-Économique) at the Université de Paris-IX Dauphine, where he spent the latter part of his teaching career. During this time he had begun to move away from sociology as a discipline (particularly in its "classical" form), and, after ceasing to teach full time, he rarely identified himself with any particular discipline, although he remained linked to the academic world. During the 1980s and 1990s his books had gained a wide audience, and in his last years he became, to an extent, an intellectual celebrity, being published frequently in the French and English speaking popular press. He nonetheless continued supporting the Institut de Recherche sur l'Innovation Sociale at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique and was Satrap at the Collège de Pataphysique. He also collaborated at the Canadian philosophical review Ctheory, where he was abundantly cited. He died of illness on March 6, 2007 at the age of 77.

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  • Who is the host?

    And why do other viewers/posters think he is such a dork?

  • the "other" posters? anyway, the host is wolfgang schirmacher, the program director and founder of the media and communication studies program. without him no program, no lectures, and no interesting comment possibilities at youtube.

Top Comments

  • RIP Jean Baudrillard

  • English subtitles would be most welcome. Thanks to egs for making these lectures open access. There must be an energetic man or a group behind such a noble initiative. Wish them all good health.. :)

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All Comments (27)

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  • Yes, it's violence, every last bit of everything. I'll buy that. But what's wrong with violence?

  • ^^ nice

  • RIP JB.....the tall trees are disappearing..

  • Genius.

  • he lives on ^_^

  • @lightepiphany Snakes don't regurgitate. But I totally agree.

  • RIP professor Baudrillard. His books are great! I only wish I could have met him in person!

  • Supposedly it is the postmodernist way of writing; the style spawns from the theory itself, but Baudrillard does not really adres this. Philosophers like Lyotard, Foucault and Derrida still talk more about truth and meaning in language, while Baudrillard usually deconstructs historical and actual scenes on the global stage.

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