CONCEPT
Invented Traditions
Hobsbawm and Ranger's concept (1983) for traditions constructed after the fact to legitimize present arrangements—the rhetorical mechanism by which ruling narratives acquire the appearance of historical continuity they do not actually possess.
The concept of "invented traditions," developed by Hobsbawm and Terence Ranger in their 1983 edited volume The Invention of Tradition, identified the mechanism by which societies construct narratives of continuity to legitimize present arrangements—ceremonies, symbols, and stories that appear ancient but were manufactured, often quite recently, to serve specific political purposes. The concept's analytical power lies in its demonstration that what is presented as tradition is frequently ideology dressed in historical costume. Applied to technology discourse, the concept identifies the standard narrative of the Luddites as technophobic as an invented tradition—a story constructed after the fact to legitimize the distributional outcomes that industrial capitalism actually produced.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The original volume examined specific cases: the Scottish kilt, Welsh bardic ceremonies, British royal pageantry, African colonial customs. Each case demonstrated that what was presented as timeless tradition had been constructed within recent memory—often the nineteenth century, often in response to specific political pressures—and then projected backward to create the appearance
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