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by Baudrillard’s theory is a revolution against latent meaning (providing as it does, the
necessary precondition for ideological analysis). Certainly this is how the argument is
often presented. But if we think again about his accounts of Disneyland and Watergate,
does what he has to say about them amount to very much more than a rather tradi-
tional ideological analysis – the discovery of the ‘truth’ behind the appearance?
Baudrillard is ambivalent about the social and cultural changes he discusses. On the
one hand, he appears to celebrate them. On the other, he suggests they signal a form
of cultural exhaustion: all that remains is endless cultural repetition. I suppose the
truth of Baudrillard’s position is a kind of resigned celebration. Lawrence Grossberg
(1988) calls it ‘celebration in the face of inevitability, an embracing of nihilism with-
out empowerment, since there is no real possibility of struggle’ (175). John Docker
(1994) is more critical:
Baudrillard offers a classic modernist narrative, history as a linear, unidirectional
story of decline. But whereas the early twentieth-century high literary modernists could
dream of an avant-garde or cultural elite that might preserve the values of the past in
the hope of a future seeding and regrowth, no such hope surfaces in Baudrillard’s
vision of a dying, entropic world. It’s not even possible to write in a rational argu-
mentative form, for that assumes a remaining community of reason (105).
Fredric Jameson
Fredric Jameson is an American Marxist cultural critic who has written a number of very
influential essays on postmodernism. Where Jameson differs from other theorists is in
his insistence that postmodernism can best be theorized from within a Marxist or neo-
Marxist framework.
For Jameson postmodernism is more than just a particular cultural style: it is above
all a ‘periodizing concept’ (1985: 113). Postmodernism is ‘the cultural dominant’ of
late or multinational capitalism. His argument is informed by Ernest Mandel’s (1978)
characterization of capitalism’s three-stage development: ‘market capitalism’,
‘monopoly capitalism’ and ‘late or multinational capitalism’. Capitalism’s third stage
‘constitutes ...the purest form of capital into hitherto uncommodified areas’
(Jameson, 1984: 78). He overlays Mandel’s linear model with a tripartite schema of
cultural development: ‘realism’, ‘modernism’ and ‘postmodernism’ (ibid.). Jameson’s
argument also borrows from Williams’s (1980) influential claim that a given social
formation will always consist of three cultural moments (‘dominant’, ‘emergent’ and
‘residual’). Williams’s argument is that the move from one historical period to another
does not usually involve the complete collapse of one cultural mode and the installa-
tion of another. Historical change may simply bring about a shift in the relative place
of different cultural modes. In a given social formation, therefore, different cultural
modes will exist but only one will be dominant. It is on the basis of this claim that

