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“They’ve invented a new machine” – a folk song’s mixed emotions on automation

1 pointsby rrherrabout 10 years ago

1 comment

dalkeabout 10 years ago
&quot;Anxiety or optimism – which side is the song on? It depends who sings it.&quot;<p>As you describe, doesn&#x27;t it also depend on the lyrics?<p>After all, the version from The Carolina Tar Heels (1952) has &quot;New machine has set me free.&quot; The Molsky version deliberately changes the lyrics to make it sad. Had that line remained in the new version, would it still be sad?<p>FWIW, other examples of folk songs of how change [1] can leave people behind are the ballad of John Henry (eg, see George Pal&#x27;s 1946 cartoon) or Phil Ochs &quot;Automation Song&quot; (&quot;Now you&#x27;ve got new machines for to take my place ... I&#x27;m walking down a jobless road and where am I to go&quot;) from 1964.<p>[1] You quoted &#x27;Progress can leave some people behind, even as it benefits society&#x27;. I use the word &quot;change&quot; because &quot;progress&quot; has two meanings: change over time, and positive change over time. The book you referenced seems to suggest that all progress benefits society. I disagree with that viewpoint, so I used a more neutral term.