What does it mean to tell a story in the age of artificial intelligence?
As AI becomes capable of writing poems, essays, and narratives that feel human, storytelling is no longer an exclusively human domain. But the real question is not whether machines can write—it is what happens to us when they do.
In The Human Voice in the Age of AI, Yayan Sopyan offers a reflective exploration of storytelling, technology, and human identity in a world shaped by algorithms.
This book is not a technical guide and not a rejection of AI. Instead, it is a thoughtful inquiry into the role of human voice in an era where content can be generated instantly and endlessly.
Inside, you will explore:
- Why storytelling is more than producing text
- How AI changes the meaning of authorship and creativity
- The hidden influence of algorithms on what we read and believe
- The ethical line between persuasion and manipulation
- Why imagination matters more than prediction
Blending philosophy, media critique, and storytelling insight, this book invites readers to pause and reconsider their relationship with technology.
Because in a world full of generated content,
telling a story as a human is no longer automatic—it is a choice.
A choice to stay aware.
A choice to stay responsible.
A choice to stay human.