akwoo, on 2023-September-09, 17:59, said:
A lot of blacksmiths lost their jobs and drank themselves to death. Many of them didn't deal with their jobs going away; rather they died and were replaced by people who could deal with not being a blacksmith.
I want to point out something I remember learning many years ago in my European history class. In 1830s France, the popular support for the ultra-monarchist political parties - the folks who advocated for the divine right of kings and the reinstitution of serfdom - in short a return to the political and social order of 1750s France - came mostly from the peasants. They were the people whose way of life was threatened by early farm mechanization, the spread of the potato (which took less labor to provide the same calories) as a crop, and the demand for labor from the newly industrializing cities. Keep in mind of course, that the people who remained peasants were the least adaptable of them - the more adaptable peasants had already picked up and moved to the city to work a better (as horrible as it was by even early 20th century standards) job in a factory.
In short - I think people want a return to an older, more familiar (partly imaginary) social order because they *feel* that this is required to bring back the more familiar jobs that were part of that social order. They want security in a world changing faster than they can cope with, and the only way they can imagine having security is a return to an entire lifestyle that they find familiar. Of course they also want today's survival rates for cancer and heart disease and widespread availability of knee replacements.
Regarding "an older partly imaginary social order": The idea interests me. From time to time I think about it and it would be good to see an analysis by someone with no axe to grind. Things just keep popping up.
Example: A granddaughter is turning five and Becky was shopping online.Loads and loads of tiaras, princess costumes and such. My younger daughter's got a dog for her fifth birthday, that was her favorite present of course, but a dinosaur set was he second favorite. Either of these presents ould have been suitable for a boy just as well as for a girl. My older daughter recently told me her favorite bedtime story was The Three Billy Goats Gruff. Again, equally suitable for a boy. Here is my point: Today women often do things that were once thought of as a man's thing. We accept that men and women can have common interests and abilities. But we seem to be creating a large divide with boys and girls. Certainly at age five, and pretty much at age ten, kids were kids when I was young. We biked together, skated together, played board games together and so on. Now there is boy's soccer and girl's soccer. Princess costumes. When I was fifteen, I and my fifteen-year-old male friends worked on cars and our interaction with fifteen-year-old girls was dating. But when I was six or eight, kids were kids. That has changed.
Example: When I was finishing high school in 1956 I had to decide whether to go to college or join the Navy. I expected, as all seventeen-year-old boys did, that sooner or later I would be in the service for a couple of years. Well, I never was. I went to college, then to grad school then got married and so on and got exemptions. In 1966 this ended, and I was classified 1-A, but I was 27 and apparently they were not drafting 27-year-olds in St. Paul. But I was the exception, guys expected to serve and most did. Again, this has changed.
And, of course, as I was growing up few adult women that I knew worked. A divorced woman and her two kids lived in the (very minimal) upstairs of our house (minimal because we had slanted roofs so the area where an adult could stand up was pretty small). The mother of one of my friends worked part-time. But mostly the men worked, the women stayed home. Financially, this worked. My father had an eighth-grade education but that was enough, we lived in a small but nice house in a friendly and safe neighborhood with a good elementary school within easy walking distance (just a block for me, but easy distance for all).
So yes
"an older partly imaginary social order": is partly imaginary but a lot of it is not imaginary at all. I would be interested in an open-minded study. Something where the object is to look at the changes and only later, if at all, attempt to say what is good, and what is bad about the changes. We can all agree that there have been many changes.