Literary Theory for Robots by Dennis Yi Tenen review – the deep roots of AI
"In the industrial age, automation came for the shoemaker and the factory-line worker," writes Dennis Yi Tenen near the start of Literary Theory for Robots. "Today, it has come for the writer, the professor, the physician, the programmer and the attorney." Like the end-of-the-planet movies that pelted the multiplexes at the turn of the millennium, newspapers and – increasingly – bookshops are awash with economists, futurologists and social semioticians talking up, down and about artificial intelligence. Even Henry Kissinger, in The Age of AI (2021), spoke of "epoch-making transformations" and an imminent "revolution in human affairs". Tenen, a tenured professor of English at New York's Columbia University, isn't nearly as apocalyptic as he initially makes out.
Mar-28-2024, 10:00:14 GMT
- Country:
- North America > United States > New York (0.25)
- Industry:
- Health & Medicine (0.52)
- Media > News (0.36)
- Technology:
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Robots (0.77)