This category is composed of sites that relate to Neo-Luddism. In addition to sites dedicated to that lifestyle, it may contain sites that provide a historical or humorous perspective on this lifestyle.
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Related categories 3
Sites 13
Posted by Roisin Kiberd.
Posted to Slate magazine by David Auerbach.
Bringing old-fashioned solutions to the 21st Century. Doubts about progress and technology.
By CJS Hayward, an Orthodox Christian author.
Offers resources and history of the Neo-Luddite movement.
Articles by Bill Joy, Kirkpatrick Sale, John Zerzan, Langdon Winner and other Luddish theorists.
Posted by Ronald Bailey, science correspondent for Reason magazine.
A group of Neo-Luddites working on Linux, using a network of systems to solve problems that interest them.
Posted to Scientific American by Brett Frischmann.
Posted to MIT Reader by Miriam A. Cherry.
(January 19, 2021)
Posted to the Smithsonian Magazine by Richard Conniff.
(March 01, 2011)
Dispatch in Slate Magazine.
(June 14, 1999)
Essay by novelist Thomas Pynchon that discusses the history of the Luddite movement and the many ways it has resurfaced throughout the years. Reprinted from The New York Times Book Review.
(October 28, 1984)
Posted by Ronald Bailey, science correspondent for Reason magazine.
Posted by Roisin Kiberd.
Articles by Bill Joy, Kirkpatrick Sale, John Zerzan, Langdon Winner and other Luddish theorists.
By CJS Hayward, an Orthodox Christian author.
Offers resources and history of the Neo-Luddite movement.
Posted to Slate magazine by David Auerbach.
Bringing old-fashioned solutions to the 21st Century. Doubts about progress and technology.
Posted to Scientific American by Brett Frischmann.
A group of Neo-Luddites working on Linux, using a network of systems to solve problems that interest them.
Posted to MIT Reader by Miriam A. Cherry.
(January 19, 2021)
Posted to the Smithsonian Magazine by Richard Conniff.
(March 01, 2011)
Dispatch in Slate Magazine.
(June 14, 1999)
Essay by novelist Thomas Pynchon that discusses the history of the Luddite movement and the many ways it has resurfaced throughout the years. Reprinted from The New York Times Book Review.
(October 28, 1984)
