Production as Blind Spot: Baudrillard’s Deconstruction of Marxist Categories
The Fork of Production. AI image To Carlos, Mateo, Rey Introduction In his work after 1972—most explicitly in The Mirror of Production —Jean Baudrillard undertakes a radical re-reading of Karl Marx that does not simply reject Marxism, but interrogates its conceptual foundations. Rather than positioning himself outside the tradition, he works from within it, exposing tensions embedded in its core categories. Central to this project is the claim that Marxist theory is structured by a series of binary oppositions—quality and quantity, use-value and exchange-value, concrete and abstract labor—that appear stable but are internally dependent. What emerges from this analysis is not a refutation in the traditional sense, but a deconstructive logic that reveals how these distinctions both sustain Marxism and delimit its horizon. Production itself, far from being a neutral analytical category, functions as a conceptual blind spot. Production as a Conceptual Limit At the center of ...