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CONCEPT

Triumphalist Erasure

The structural mechanism—identified by Hobsbawm across every technological transition—by which the narrative of progress systematically excludes the experience of the displaced, producing histories that are true in aggregate and false in distribution.
Triumphalist erasure is the analytical category Hobsbawm used to describe the systematic exclusion of the displaced from the standard narratives of technological transformation. The erasure operates through three principal mechanisms: temporal displacement, in which the costs are placed in a different temporal frame than the gains; individual diagnosis, in which structural problems are converted into personal failures of adaptation; and the narrative of inevitability, in which the technology's distributional outcomes are presented as natural rather than political. Each mechanism performs the same political function: relieving institutions and beneficiaries of the obligation to address the distributional question by removing it from the agenda.

In The You On AI Field Guide

Temporal displacement is the most common mechanism. The gains are measured in the present—productivity today, revenue this quarter, capability this year. The suffering is placed in the past—the costs of the transition, regrettable but behind us—or in the future—the displaced will eventually benefit, through retraining, adaptation, the creation of new categories of work. The temporal displacement

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