Seminal essays written by Baudrillard for a journal devoted to a
radical leftist critique of architecture, urbanism, and everyday life.
The Utopie group was born in 1966 at Henri Lefebvre's house in the
Pyrenees. The eponymous journal edited by Hubert Tonka brought together
sociologists Jean Baudrillard, René Lourau, and Catherine Cot,
architects Jean Aubert, Jean-Paul Jungmann, Antoine Stinco, and
landscape architect Isabelle Auricoste. Over the next decade, both in
theory and in practice, the group articulated a radical ultra-leftist
critique of architecture, urbanism, and everyday life. Utopia Deferred
collects all of the essays Jean Baudrillard published in Utopie as well
as recent interviews with Jean Baudrillard and Hubert Tonka.Utopie
served as a workshop for Baudrillard's thought. Many of the essays he
first published in Utopie were seminal for some of his most shockingly
original books: For a Critique of the Political Economy of the Sign, The
Mirror of Production, Simulations, Symbolic Exchange and Death, and In
the Shadow of the Silent Majorities. But Utopie was also a topical
journal and a political one; the topics of these essays are often torn
from the headlines of the tumultuous decade following the uprisings of
May 1968.