Aye, thanks for the mention, Andrew.
For stuff particularly related to the Luddites, and applications to current times, check out "Rebels Against the Future: the Luddites and Their War on the Industrial Revolutions, Lessons for the Computer Age" by Kirkpatrick Sale. It's a brilliant history of ideas and action with particular attention to how and what we can learn from them.
My continued attraction to industrial culture goes back to SPK and their manifestos, Maurizio Bianchi and the work of bands like A.B.G.S. Reading "Wreckers of Civilization," it's clear why Genesis hated SPK and MB - they reflect a completely alternate view of industrial civilization. To SPK and MB, industrial civilization is a regression of the species, the death of the species. Genesis and Throbbing Gristle relish in the myth of progress, and further are happy to continue gnawing on the fruit of the tree of knowledge, to transcend the human and become gods as part of an inverted gnosticism or Luciferian transhumanism. Genesis' emergence as the industrial Frankenstein meets Crowley (a mockery of chaos magick, and adherent to the initiatory systems) typifies the alternate image the SPK was putting forward. Besides, SPK made better music, anyway.
I could, as Andrew said, provide a lengthy reading list on technology. I'm a big fan of John Zerzan's work, but there's a lot more out there. "The Culture of Technology" by Pacey is amazing, as is "Technology, Time and the Conversations of Modernity" by Lorenzo C Simpson. If you can find "Questioning Technology: A Critical Anthology" edited by John Zerzan and Alice Carnes, grab it. Some of the best material on technology by dozens of great authors from Stanley Diamond to Jean Beaudrillard and Jacques Ellul to Lewis Mumford. "Against Civilization," mentioned above, is also a terrific anthology and highly recommended. "Technopoly" by Neil Postman is good, also. If you want more, I could name a bunch of other, perhaps relating more to environmental issues, or to the negative effects of cities on communities, or the process of "development" of non-modernized communities, for instance. There's a lot of proto-fascist stuff out there by J Evola, Pentti Linkola and the like, but it comes across as ridiculously confused - abhorring the technics of machines but not of advanced forms of governments to manage bloated populations communed around cities. If you want something without nearly as much postmodernist or leftist language (though the above mentioned works are more post-left), I would suggest checking out Ivan Illich. He's a lot more of a "traditionalist," and a terrific writer. Edward Goldsmith truly reclaims the term "conservative" in his vision of limited technology, ecological thinking, connection to the land, localism and value of family and community. His work is unbelievable, and much is available online at
http://www.edwardgoldsmith.com/. His last great work, "The Way," might be my manifesto. The more conservative among you on the forum would enjoy his work the most, I would think. (Me being an anti-globalist, politics are largely irrelevant to me, as I think they are developed organically in a community, based on human ecology and environment; politics are only relevant with imposed economic structures that unnecessarily link communities to build empires and accumulate resources and slaves.)
Happy to see this thread on here. The vision of industrialism as death, is what makes industrial (music) culture interesting to me.