Perhaps I can bring another perspective to this debate. I came into all of this ~6-7 years ago while in jr. high. I was really interested in archery after having heard many stories about archery, and in fact my namesake is a famous indian archer. So I asked my parents to buy me a bow so that I could learn. I guess I threw a bit of a fit about it because I was denied the opportunity due to my behavior. So being a child of the internet age, the first thing I did was run to google and look up how to build a bow. Somehow, that seemed like the logical thing to do. And lo and behold, I ran into Jawge's site. Of course, being so young all I ended up doing was ruining some boards. Tried again after a few years and managed to produce a single shooter that broke after about a month. Now I'm back, produced one shooting bow (though the tiller is off), and I'm on work on several more.
The point is that rather than being drawn by any sort of post-modernism, I came into this because of the low cost involved in making your own bows! Doesn't make for a very romantic story, but I imagine that I'm not the only one who's here for that reason. I stayed however because I can make these myself. Sure, if I had access to glass, I would probably try and make a bow with that as well, I have no prejudice against it. But the idea is that I can do it myself; I'm the sort of person who likes to do things myself. I've been building computers since about the same time that I tried to make my first bows for example, and I write my own software when possible. The self-reliance inherent in constructing a bow is what keeps bringing me back to "traditional archery" or whatever the buzz word has been, is now, or will be. But in the end, its just that, a word. It only has the meaning that we choose to give it.