Publication:
Performing the Post-Anthropocene AI: When a Robot Writes a Play

dc.contributor.authorBAŞ, ANIL
dc.contributor.authorsvan Heerden I., Duman Ç., BAŞ A.
dc.date.accessioned2024-08-05T11:13:01Z
dc.date.accessioned2026-01-10T17:38:54Z
dc.date.available2024-08-05T11:13:01Z
dc.date.issued2023-12-01
dc.description.abstractPromoted as the first theatrical play written by artificial intelligence, AI: Když Robot Pí še Hru (AI: When a Robot Writes a Play) premiered and livestreamed globally on 26 February 2021.1 The script is a series of dialogues generated in English by OpenAI’s language model GPT-2 (Radford et al. 2019). It was then translated into Czech and performed in Prague, though not initially to a live audience.2 In total, 92% of the characters’ lines are computer-generated (THEaiTRobot 1.0 et al.2021). THEaiTRE, a team of natural language processing and theatre researchers, initiated the project to celebrate the centenary of the term robot coined by Czech playwright Karel Čapek in 1921 in R.U.R. (Rossum’s Universal Robots). In Čapek’s play, engineers produce artificial humanoids for cheap labor, but the robots rebel. In the play’s climactic moment, the character Radius—buttressed by the humanoids’ newly gained status as conscious beings—signals the end of humankind: “Robots of the world! The power of man has fallen. A new world has arisen: The Rule of the Robots! March!” (Čapek [1921] 1923:165). Nicholas Anderson reads R.U.R. as a potent critique of humanism, finding constitutive possibilities in human extinction (2014). According to Jana Horáková and Jozef Kelemen, the play significantly repositions humans alongside and entwined with machines in a complex new world (2011). Chiara Mengozzi convincingly argues that Čapek spurs us to look beyond anthropocentrism (2020) while Micha Braun examines the post-anthropocentric possibilities exemplified in theatrical projects from Central Eastern Europe (2022).
dc.identifier.citationvan Heerden I., Duman Ç., BAŞ A., "Performing the Post-Anthropocene AI: When a Robot Writes a Play", TDR - The Drama Review - A Journal of Performance Studies, cilt.67, sa.4, ss.104-120, 2023
dc.identifier.doi10.1017/s1054204323000448
dc.identifier.endpage120
dc.identifier.issn1054-2043
dc.identifier.issue4
dc.identifier.startpage104
dc.identifier.urihttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85179834907&origin=inward
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/11424/297382
dc.identifier.volume67
dc.language.isoeng
dc.relation.ispartofTDR - The Drama Review - A Journal of Performance Studies
dc.rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.subjectSosyal ve Beşeri Bilimler
dc.subjectDil ve Edebiyat
dc.subjectSanat
dc.subjectSocial Sciences and Humanities
dc.subjectPhilology
dc.subjectArt
dc.subjectSanat ve Beşeri Bilimler (AHCI)
dc.subjectSanat ve Beşeri Bilimler
dc.subjectEDEBİYAT
dc.subjectSANAT
dc.subjectArts & Humanities (AHCI)
dc.subjectARTS & HUMANITIES
dc.subjectLITERATURE
dc.subjectART
dc.subjectGörsel Sanatlar ve Gösteri Sanatları
dc.subjectSosyal Bilimler ve Beşeri Bilimler
dc.subjectEdebiyat ve Edebiyat Teorisi
dc.subjectVisual Arts and Performing Arts
dc.subjectSocial Sciences & Humanities
dc.subjectLiterature and Literary Theory
dc.titlePerforming the Post-Anthropocene AI: When a Robot Writes a Play
dc.typearticle
dspace.entity.typePublication

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