Faith in Fakes: Travels in Hyperreality is a book about spontaneous discovery, thinking as play, and true understanding as rejecting intellectual closure.
The book is a collection of articles from mainly Italian newspapers and magazines about the wider subject of human consciousness, including Eco’s own subject of semiotics. The subjects of the main essay includes modern Americana such as wax museums, Superman and holography, and the other articles discuss a number of other subjects, including football, the Middle Ages, Jim Jones and the People’s Temple, and tight jeans.
Holography, wax museums, the secret meaning of spectator sports, Superman and the intellectual effects of over-tight jeans are just a few of the subjects covered in this collection of witty, entertaining and thought-provoking delights from Umberto Eco, celebrated author of The Name of the Rose.