Porchlight Business Book Awards season is here.

Literary Theory for Robots: How Computers Learned to Write

Literary Theory for Robots: How Computers Learned to Write

By Dennis Yi Tenen

In the industrial age, automation came for the shoemaker and the seamstress. Today, it has come for the writer, physician, programmer, and attorney.

READ FULL DESCRIPTION

Quantity Price Discount
List Price $22.00  
1 - 24 $18.70 15%
25 - 99 $15.40 30%
100 - 499 $14.30 35%
500 + $13.86 37%

Quick Quote

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit

Non-returnable discount pricing

$22.00


Book Information

Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
Publish Date: 02/06/2024
Pages: 176
ISBN-13: 9780393882186
ISBN-10: 0393882187
Language: English

What We're Saying

February 06, 2024

February 6, 2024

By Porchlight

READ FULL DESCRIPTION

Full Description

Literary Theory for Robots reveals the hidden history of modern machine intelligence, taking readers on a spellbinding journey from medieval Arabic philosophy to visions of a universal language, past Hollywood fiction factories and missile defense systems trained on Russian folktales. In this provocative reflection on the shared pasts of literature and computer science, former Microsoft engineer and professor of comparative literature Dennis Yi Tenen provides crucial context for recent developments in AI, which holds important lessons for the future of humans living with smart technology.

Intelligence expressed through technology should not be mistaken for a magical genie, capable of self-directed thought or action. Rather, in highly original and effervescent prose with a generous dose of wit, Yi Tenen asks us to read past the artifice--to better perceive the mechanics of collaborative work. Something as simple as a spell-checker or a grammar-correction tool, embedded in every word-processor, represents the culmination of a shared human effort, spanning centuries.

Smart tools, like dictionaries and grammar books, have always accompanied the act of writing, thinking, and communicating. That these paper machines are now automated does not bring them to life. Nor can we cede agency over the creative process. With its masterful blend of history, technology, and philosophy, Yi Tenen's work ultimately urges us to view AI as a matter of labor history, celebrating the long-standing cooperation between authors and engineers.

About the Author

Dennis Yi Tenen is an associate professor of English and comparative literature at Columbia University. Originally a software engineer at Microsoft, Tenen is now an affiliate at Columbia's Data Science Institute.

Learn More

We have updated our privacy policy. Click here to read our full policy.