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Story:

It's a popular retort to someone struggling to operate their new smartphone or refusing to buy the latest gizmo: "You're such a Luddite."

There is another word for it - technophobe - but it doesn't convey the same sense of irrational hostility to the modern world. So where did "Luddite" come from?

In the midst of the British industrial revolution, skilled textile workers feared for their jobs. An uprising began in 1811 when Nottinghamshire weavers attacked the new automated looms that were replacing them.

The workers took inspiration from a fabled General Ludd or King Ludd living in Sherwood Forest. His fanciful name may have come from a young Leicestershire weaver called Ned Lud, who in the late 18th Century was rumoured to have smashed two stocking frames.

The machine breaking spread to West Yorkshire wool workers and Lancashire cotton mills, in what the historian Eric Hobsbawm called "collective bargaining by riot". Machinery was wrecked, mills were burned down and the Luddites fought pitched battles with the British Army.

The response of the state was brutal. Machine breaking became a capital offence. At trials in York, 17 Luddites were hanged and another 25 transported to Australia, while in Lancaster eight were hanged and 38 sentenced to transportation.

One of the most serious incidents happened two hundred years ago this month. About 150 Luddites armed with hammers and axes attacked Cartwright's mill in Rawfolds, near Huddersfield. The authorities shot two of them dead and the attack was eventually repelled.

For Katrina Navickas, author of Loyalism & Radicalism in Lancashire 1798-1815, they were working-class heroes. Trade unions had been banned in 1800 and here was another way for workers to defend their livelihoods.

Today with digital technology enlivening or intruding on - depending on your view - day-to-day experiences, the term is more popular than ever. People nostalgic for a time before mobile ringtones had colonized train carriages may class themselves as Luddites.

But whereas once it was cool for kids not to understand science, the tide now appears to be with the nerds and geeks. Luddite may sometimes be a fond term but its adherents are on the losing side.

Question:

1. Explain how the subject matter of this article reminds you of a character in history or literature. Cite several pieces of textual evidence to support analysis of what the text says explicitly as well as inferences are drawn from the text.

1 Answer

10 votes

Answer:

ok, so the subject matter of this article reminds me of a character in history of literature because it talks about how the technology through time increased and got better, just like in the stories we read, or biographies of people that helped change history. in every story we read there is always a meaning behind it, just like there was a meaning behind all of the history that has happened in many countries before we were ever alive! One piece of evidence to show this is relevant to the story is found in paragraph #5 "The machine breaking spread to West Yorkshire wool workers and Lancashire cotton mills, in what the historian Eric Hobsbawm called "collective bargaining by riot". Machinery was wrecked, mills were burned down and the Luddites fought pitched battles with the British Army." This piece of evidence shows that just like I'm stories we hear, in history there were many conflicts and many incredible things that took place which lead to many stories we know of today, and its necessary for us to look back and them and learn from them! INFERENCE-I think that the reason as to why the people did what they did back then that lead up to these events where indeed to make things better one way or the other, and in a way increase technology.

(I couldn't find another piece of evidence. I hope this helped tho :)

If you have anymore questions please let me know ! =D

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