And to complete the look back over the  books published by Open Humanities Press in 2025...

April saw the publication of Thinking with AI, edited by Hannes Bajohr:

https://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/thinking-with-ai/

And March, /Masked Media: What It Means to Be Human in the Age of Artificial Creative Intelligence /by Gary Hall

http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/masked-media/

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Thinking with AI, edited by Hannes Bajohr:

https://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/thinking-with-ai/

This edited volume explores a novel approach to the intersection of artificial intelligence and the humanities, proposing that instead of merely writing about AI, scholars should think with AI. Rather than treating AI as an external subject of study, the essays explore how concepts from artificial intelligence, machine learning, and data science can provide ways to rethink core humanistic questions of meaning, representation, and culture.

Critical AI Studies typically focuses on AI’s societal implications—its role in surveillance, exclusion, and global capitalism. This volume extends that critique, but also explores how AI brings our already existing understanding of aesthetics, language, history, and knowledge into relief and stands in an often productive conflict with them. AI’s pattern recognition and generative capabilities, for example, provokes new ways to grasp aesthetic unity, reimagine language as an autonomous system, and reconsider the boundaries between text and image.

The essays illustrate how AI can be used as a productive metaphor and intellectual tool for the humanities. From formalizing concepts like Stimmung and vibe to challenging traditional distinctions between writing and thought or between history and data, the book shows how AI can be not just an object of study but a conceptual catalyst that ignites unexpected connections to long-standing humanistic concerns. By engaging AI in this way, scholars can not only critique it but also expand the horizons of their own fields.

With essays by Peli Grietzer, Leif Weatherby, Mercedes Bunz, Hannes Bajohr, Fabian Offert, Lev Manovich, Babette Babich, Markus Krajewski, Orit Halpern, Christina Vagt and Audrey Borowski.

Editor Bio

Hannes Bajohr is Assistant Professor of German at the University of California, Berkeley. His research focuses on the history of German philosophy in the 20th century, political theory, and theories of the digital and AI. Bajohr’s academic texts have appeared in Configurations, Poetics Today, and New German Critique, among others. His most recent books are Schreibenlassen: Texte zur Literatur im Digitalen (Berlin: August, 2022), Ad Judith N. Shklar: Leben, Werk, Gegenwart (with Rieke Trimçev, Hamburg: EVA, 2024), and Digitale Literatur zur Einführung (with Simon Roloff, Hamburg: Junius, 2024); in 2025, his book Postartifizielle Texte: Schreiben nach KI will come out with Suhrkamp. Bajohr is also active as a writer of digital literature. His most recent work is the novel (Berlin, Miami) (Berlin: Rohstoff, 2023), which was co-written with a self-trained large language model.


Like all Open Humanities Press books, Thinking with AI is available open access (and can be downloaded for free):

https://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/thinking-with-ai/


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/Masked Media: What It Means to Be Human in the Age of Artificial Creative Intelligence /by Gary Hall

http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/masked-media/

Book description

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If we want a socially and environmentally just future, do we need a radical new theory of change – or to radically change theory? It’s this question Gary Hall and his collaborators have been addressing for over twenty years with experimental publishing projects such as Open Humanities Press, Liquid and Living Books, and the Culture-Led Re-Commoning of Cities. Unsettling received ideas of the author and the book, originality and copyright, real and artificial intelligence, these uncommon communities of theorist-mediums are testing the ‘non-modernist-liberal’ modes of creating and sharing knowledge enabled by various media technologies, from writing and print, through photography and video, to computers and GenAI. By thinking outside the masked black box that renders Euro-Western knowledge-making practices invisible – keeping the human ontologically separate from the nonhuman, be it animals, the planet or algorithmic machines – they show there’s no such thing as the human, the nonhuman already being in(the)human.

/Masked Media/ is one such experimental project. It is not a ‘human-authored’ work. Instead, the thinking within it has been generated by a radically relational assemblage that includes AI and more. Although the book appears under a real name – ‘Gary Hall’ – which, like Banksy and Karen Eliot, acts as a mask, it is not the intellectual property of a singular human individual, and is published under a Collective Conditions for Re-Use licence to reflect this. /Masked Media/ shows how such norm-critical experimentation is of vital importance to our understanding of everything, from identity politics and the decolonisation of knowledge, through epistemologies of the Global South and the possibilities of open city infrastructure, to extractive capitalism, planetary destruction and the Anthropocene. It thus constitutes a call to radically redesign theory for a time of multiple crises.

In /Masked Media/, a follow-up to /A Stubborn Fury/, Hall proceeds to show how our ways of writing and working can be reinvented to produce a more socially just future after the years of austerity and the coronavirus pandemic.

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Author bio


Gary Hall is an experimental critical theorist working at the intersection of digital culture, politics and technology. He is Professor of Media at Coventry University, UK, where he served as founding director of the Centre for Postdigital Cultures from 2017 to 2025. He is the author of a number of books, including /A Stubborn Fury/ (Open Humanities Press, 2021), /Pirate Philosophy/ (MIT Press, 2016) and /The Uberfication of the University/ (University of Minnesota Press, 2016).




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Gary Hall
Professor of Media
Centre for Postdigital Cultures, Coventry University

Director of Open Humanities Press:http://www.openhumanitiespress.org Blog:http://garyhall.squarespace.com/journal/

Latest:

Journal issue: Ecologies of Dissemination issue of PARSE Journal #21 - Summer 
2025, edited by Eva Weinmayr and Femke 
Snelting:https://parsejournal.com/journal/#ecologies-of-dissemination. (I'm one 
of the contributors to this experimental issue which emphasizes collective over 
individual authorship.)

Video: 'Liquidate AI Art', Computer Arts 
Society:https://www.bcs.org/events-calendar/2025/october/webinar-liquidate-ai-art

Talk: 'The Independent Intellectual vs Posting Zero and the Dead 
Internet':http://garyhall.squarespace.com/journal/2025/12/2/the-independent-intellectual-vs-posting-zero-and-the-dead-in.html




















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