Document details

AI narratives: a history of imaginative thinking about intelligent machines

Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press (2020), xii, 424 pp.

Contains illustrations, charts, index

ISBN 978-0-19-258604-9 (online); 978-0-19-884666-6 (print)

"This book is the first to examine the history of imaginative thinking about intelligent machines. As real artificial intelligence (AI) begins to touch on all aspects of our lives, this long narrative history shapes how the technology is developed, deployed, and regulated. It is therefore a crucial social and ethical issue. Part I of this book provides a historical overview from ancient Greece to the start of modernity. These chapters explore the revealing prehistory of key concerns of contemporary AI discourse, from the nature of mind and creativity to issues of power and rights, from the tension between fascination and ambivalence to investigations into artificial voices and technophobia. Part II focuses on the twentieth and twenty-first centuries in which a greater density of narratives emerged alongside rapid developments in AI technology. These chapters reveal not only how AI narratives have consistently been entangled with the emergence of real robotics and AI, but also how they offer a rich source of insight into how we might live with these revolutionary machines. Through their close textual engagements, these chapters explore the relationship between imaginative narratives and contemporary debates about AI’s social, ethical, and philosophical consequences, including questions of dehumanization, automation, anthropomorphization, cybernetics, cyberpunk, immortality, slavery, and governance. The contributions, from leading humanities and social science scholars, show that narratives about AI offer a crucial epistemic site for exploring contemporary debates about these powerful new technologies." (Publisher description)
Introduction: Imagining AI / Stephen Cave, Kanta Dihal, and Sarah Dillon, 1
PART I. ANTIQUITY TO MODERNITY
1 Homer’s Intelligent Machines: AI in Antiquity / Genevieve Liveley and Sam Thomas, 25
2 Demons and Devices: Artificial and Augmented Intelligence before AI / E. R. Truitt, 49
3 The Android of Albertus Magnus: A Legend of Artificial Being / Minsoo Kang and Ben Halliburton, 72
4 Artificial Slaves in the Renaissance and the Dangers of Independent Innovation / Kevin LaGrandeur, 95
5 Making the Automaton Speak: Hearing Artificial Voices in the Eighteenth Century / Julie Park, 119
6 Victorian Fictions of Computational Creativity / Megan Ward, 144
7 Machines Like Us? Modernism and the Question of the Robot / Paul March-Russell, 165
PART II. MODERN AND CONTEMPORARY
8 Enslaved Minds: Artificial Intelligence, Slavery, and Revolt / Kanta Dihal, 189
9 Machine Visions: Artificial Intelligence, Society, and Control / Will Slocombe, 213
10 ‘A Push-Button Type of Thinking’: Automation, Cybernetics, and AI in Midcentury British Literature / Graham Matthews, 237
11 Artificial Intelligence and the Parent–Child Narrative / Beth Singler, 260
12 AI and Cyberpunk Networks / Anna McFarlane, 284
13 AI: Artificial Immortality and Narratives of Mind Uploading / Stephen Cave, 309
14 Artificial Intelligence and the Sovereign-Governance Game / Sarah Dillon and Michael Dillon, 333
15 The Measure of a Woman: Fembots, Fact and Fiction / Kate Devlin and Olivia Belton, 357
16 The Fall and Rise of AI: Investigating AI Narratives with Computational Methods / Gabriel Recchia, 382