Today it is quotidian reality in its entirety - political, social, historical and economic - that from now on incorporates the simulatory dimension of hyperrealism. We live everywhere already in an "esthetic Consumer Culture and Postmodernism - Page 67by Mike Featherstone - 2007 - 232 pagesLimited preview - About this book
| Mark Poster - 1990 - 189 pages
...twentieth-century culture mobilizes subjects. "It is reality itself today that is hyperrealist. . . . Today it is quotidian reality in its entirety - political,...and economic — that from now on incorporates the simulatory dimension of hyperrealism. We live everywhere already in an 'esthetic' hallucination of... | |
| Herbert Grabes - 1994 - 454 pages
...to be called art (the other). 116 Jean Baudrillard, Simulations (New York: Semiotextfe], 1983) 148: "Today it is quotidian reality in its entirety - political, social, historical and economic- that from now ments and distortions caused by power shifts and confusing mutations in the political, technological... | |
| Arthur Asa Berger - 1997 - 180 pages
...Gnocchi?" Does postmodernism answer any other questions? Jean Baudrillard, Simulations It is reality itself that is hyperrealist. Surrealism's secret already...already in an "aesthetic hallucination of reality." When the lights went on again, the head of Professor Ettore Gnocchi was lying on the table. There was... | |
| Arthur Asa Berger - 1998 - 324 pages
...the generation by models of a real without origins or reality: a hyperreal. (Baudrillard 1983a, 2) Today it is quotidian reality in its entirety —...and economic — that from now on incorporates the simulatory dimension of hyperrealism. (Baudrillard 1983a, 147) Although Baudrillard does not adopt... | |
| Ghent Urban Studies Team - 1999 - 456 pages
...it close to Benjamin's phantasmagoria. "It is reality itself today that is hyperrealist," he writes. "Surrealism's secret already was that the most banal...already in an 'aesthetic' hallucination of reality" l'983:148l. Despite Baudrillard's totalizing claim, it seems reasonable, nonetheless, to suppose that... | |
| Laurie Langbauer - 1999 - 258 pages
...impulse of pure serial replication, one out of control and without reference, inheres in everyday life: "today it is quotidian reality in its entirety —...and economic — that from now on incorporates the simulatory dimension" (Simulations, 147). The feminized masses resist the system through the very serialized... | |
| Marty Glass - 2001 - 392 pages
...developments, shopping malls and products which are reproductions or models, instantiations of codes: 'today it is quotidian reality in its entirety—...and economic— that from now on incorporates the simulatory dimension of hyper-realism'. Everyday life thus becomes more and more hyperreal as hair,... | |
| Arthur Asa Berger - 2003 - 148 pages
...In a postmodern world such as that described by Baudrillard, would that matter? It is reality itself that is hyperrealist. Surrealism's secret already...already in an "aesthetic" hallucination of reality." — JEAN BAUDRILLARD, Simulations (New York: Semiotext(e),1983), 148. Here Baudrillard develops one... | |
| Alexander Graf, Dietrich Scheunemann - 2007 - 426 pages
...of Magic: World Construction in Surrealist and Belgian Magic 247 Realist Fiction and Cinema Notes: "Surrealism's secret already was that the most banal...already in an 'aesthetic' hallucination of reality". (Baudrillard 1983: 148) Primary works cited Aragon, Louis. 1926 [1966]. Le Pays an deParis. Paris:... | |
| Rolf Frankenberger - 2007 - 260 pages
...etwa beschrieb den Kern der postmodernen Ästhetisierung des Alltagslebens schon 1983 folgendermaßen: „Today it is quotidian reality in its entirety -...already in an aesthetic hallucination of reality" (Baudrillard 1983a:148). Postmoderne ist für ihn in erster Linie eine durch die Auflösung der Unterscheidung... | |
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