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Susan Sontag

The critic who diagnosed the interpretive reflex—the compulsive translation of every encounter into meaning—as the deepest impoverishment of modern culture, and whose demand for an erotics of genuine attention is the sharpest instrument we have for reading AI-generated text honestly.
Susan Sontag is the thinker of attention before interpretation. In Against Interpretation (1966), she argued that the modern habit of asking “what does it mean?” before attending to what a work is constitutes a revenge of the intellect upon direct experience—a mechanism that converts every unsettling encounter into a comfortable extraction. Her counter-demand—not a hermeneutics but an erotics of art—was for perception that sits with form, surface, and texture before reaching for significance. In On Photography (1977), she extended the argument to the image-saturated culture, diagnosing an ecology of images that anaesthetizes rather than sharpens perception; in Illness as Metaphor (1978), she showed how cultural narratives colonize raw experience and assign moral blame to patients before they can confront what is simply happening to their bodies. Each book is the same book: a demand for honest attention before imposed meaning. In the age of large language models that produce the formal properties of thought without its substance, Sontag’s discipline becomes the exact perceptual practice the moment requires—the capacity to feel the difference between prose that earned its elegance through struggle and prose that arrived elegant by default, between form without resistance and form that bears the weight of genuine encounter.
Susan Sontag
Susan Sontag

In the [YOU] on AI Field Guide

The cycle that began with [YOU] on AI asks what it would mean to see the machine clearly—without the narcotic of hype and without the paralysis of fear. Sontag supplies the perceptual discipline that question requires. Her central diagnosis maps directly onto the AI moment: the discourse has rushed to interpretation—AI means liberation, AI means catastrophe, AI means the end of authorship—before anyone has had time for the pre-interpretive encounter that she argued was the only honest starting point. The Google principal engineer who posted “I am not joking, and this isn’t funny” was reporting an encounter, not offering an interpretation; within days the interpretation machine had converted her testimony into evidence for positions that already existed. Sontag would have recognized the process instantly.

Her framework reframes every question the cycle asks about AI-generated text. The question is never “Is this correct?” but “Did the encounter teach me something?”—the distinction between the session that left the builder energized and slightly disoriented, which is the signature of genuine intellectual encounter, and the session that left the builder satisfied but unchanged, which is the signature of productive addiction without deposit. The Deleuze moment Edo Segal describes in The Orange Pill—where Claude’s elegant passage connected two threads beautifully and turned out to be philosophically wrong—is exemplary in Sontag’s terms: the passage had the formal properties of insight without its substrate, and it was caught not through interpretation but through attention to what did not sit right.

Erotics of Art
Erotics of Art

She stands in the cycle’s gallery alongside Byung-Chul Han, whose diagnosis of the smooth aligns with her analysis of form without resistance—AI output as the aesthetic of the frictionless, the unremarkably plausible. But where Han names the condition from the outside, Sontag provides the internal practice: the cultivation of a sensibility attuned to the difference between genuine and simulated encounter, a sensibility that can feel, before it can articulate, the difference between prose forged through struggle and prose generated by default. Her demand was never comfortable; it required the willingness to remain in a state of uncertainty that interpretation is designed to abolish. In the context of AI, the demand is sharper still, because the uncertainty is not about what the work means but about whether the work exists at all.

Origin

Born in New York in 1933 and raised partly in Tucson and Los Angeles, Sontag entered the University of Chicago at fifteen, graduated from Harvard, and had completed her doctorate in philosophy before the age of twenty-five. The intellectual formation was fierce and omnivorous: she read everything, remembered everything, and refused to respect the disciplinary boundaries that organized American academic life. She published fiction before criticism, but it was “Against Interpretation” in 1964—collected with its companion essays in the 1966 volume—that made her famous and established the central axis of her thought. The essay arrived as a provocation into a culture then saturated with Freudian and Marxist hermeneutics, and its target was not interpretation as such but the interpretive reflex: the compulsive conversion of every encounter into a content that could be extracted and filed.

Byung-Chul Han
Byung-Chul Han

Her subsequent work followed the same logic across different domains. On Photography deployed the framework against the image ecology; Illness as Metaphor deployed it against the narratives imposed on disease; Regarding the Pain of Others (2003) returned to photography to confront the ethics of witnessing atrocity images. Camp—her 1964 anatomy of the aesthetic that loves the unnatural and excessive—was a parallel exercise in categorizing artificial surfaces without confusing them for genuine depth. Her journals, published posthumously as Reborn and As Consciousness Is Harnessed to Flesh, reveal the roughness beneath the polished essays: the record of a mind in continuous, effortful motion, doubling back, contradicting itself, refusing the satisfaction of resolution. The roughness is the record of genuine thought. The smoothness of the published work is the form imposed upon that thought.

Ecology of Images
Ecology of Images

She died in New York in December 2004, before the generative AI revolution, but the technology she never saw had been anticipated by her framework with unsettling precision. A system that produces the formal properties of thought without the process that produces thought, that generates the shape of insight without the substance, that arrives already domesticated—polished, fluent, optimized for the consumer’s expectations—is the object her entire critical career was building instruments to detect.

Camp (Sensibility)
Camp (Sensibility)

Key Ideas

Against Interpretation. Sontag’s founding move is the distinction between experiencing a work and interpreting it. Interpretation, she argues, is the mechanism by which a culture that prizes content over form converts every encounter into a transaction: the work means X, and now that I know X, I can move on. “Interpretation is the compliment that mediocrity pays to genius.” Applied to AI, the interpretive reflex is what prevents us from attending to the specific quality of large language model output—its particular fluency, its particular weightlessness—before deciding what it means.

Illness as Metaphor
Illness as Metaphor

An Erotics of Art. The counter-demand to interpretation is not anti-intellectual but re-orientational: attend to form, texture, and surface before reaching for meaning. The “erotics of art” is the pleasure of genuine encounter—the reorganization of consciousness that being truly in the presence of a work effects. Its AI-age equivalent is the discipline of noticing whether a session with Claude taught you something, whether the collaboration produced genuine surprise, whether the encounter left you slightly different from how it found you. The erotics of genuine thought is the pleasure of being changed by one’s own thinking.

Large Language Models
Large Language Models

Form Without Resistance. A central concept Sontag implies rather than names: the difference between form as record of encounter and form as decoration. Genuine form bears the marks of where material pushed back against the maker’s intentions—the joints and seams where the maker’s response to resistance produced something neither maker nor material could have predicted. AI-generated prose has no such marks. It arrives pre-configured, optimized for consumption, lacking the friction that genuine form requires. This is form without resistance: structurally competent, substantively inert.

Form Without Resistance
Form Without Resistance

The Ecology of Images. In On Photography, Sontag diagnosed how photographic proliferation creates a self-reinforcing ecology of images that replaces reality rather than documenting it, producing anaesthesia rather than sharpened perception. The AI image flood—generating more images in eighteen months than photography produced in its entire history—extends her diagnosis to a substrate with no indexical relationship to any reality whatsoever. More broadly, AI-processed thought is mediated thought: the idea passes through the machine and returns in a form determined by the machine’s optimizations, with the traces of the thinking process sanitized away.

Illness as Metaphor. Sontag’s polemic against the cultural narratives imposed on disease argues that the most truthful way of regarding illness is one most purified of metaphoric thinking. Applied to the experience of AI-augmented work—variously narrated as addiction, as transcendence, as inevitable phase—the discipline is the same: strip the metaphors, attend to the thing itself, describe the body, the pull, the aftermath, before reaching for a narrative that makes the experience manageable at the cost of making it truthful.

Debates & Critiques

The central debate Sontag’s framework opens is whether the discipline she describes can be practiced at scale, or whether the proliferation of AI-generated content will overwhelm the human capacity for the kind of sustained, serious attention that constitutes genuine encounter—just as she came to believe that the proliferation of photographs had overwhelmed genuine seeing. Sontag herself, in Regarding the Pain of Others, abandoned her earlier ecological prescription as unrealistic: “There isn’t going to be an ecology of images.” Optimists argue that AI tools, deployed differently—to protect attention rather than fragment it, to slow composition rather than accelerate it—could serve the Sontagian discipline rather than defeat it. Byung-Chul Han’s analysis of the smooth converges with her diagnosis of form without resistance, but his prescription is more pessimistic: the achievement society has no structural incentive to impose friction on the production of content. A second line of debate concerns the camp sensibility Sontag herself anatomized: some argue that AI-generated text warrants a camp appreciation—the excessive, the optimized, the frictionless celebrated for what it is rather than condemned for what it lacks. Sontag’s framework rejects this: camp requires excess and failed serious attempt; AI output is characterized not by excess but by calibration, not by failure but by adequacy. They are different aesthetic territories entirely, and confusing them obscures what is specific about each.

Three Disciplines of Honest Attention

Sontag’s framework for seeing AI output clearly
First Discipline
Against Interpretation
Resist the rush to meaning. AI output arrives pre-interpreted, already domesticated, optimized for the consumer’s expectations. The first discipline is to sit with the output before deciding what it signifies—to attend to its form, texture, and surface before extracting its content.
Second Discipline
Erotics of Genuine Thought
Ask not “Is this correct?” but “Did the encounter change me?” The erotics of thought is the pleasure of being reorganized by one’s own thinking. The session that leaves the builder energized and slightly disoriented is genuine encounter. The session that leaves the builder satisfied but unchanged is consumption.
Third Discipline
Detecting Form Without Resistance
Learn to feel the difference between prose that earned its elegance through struggle—bearing the seams of where material pushed back—and prose that arrived elegant by default. The capacity to detect form without resistance is the essential perceptual discipline of the age, and it cannot be taught through interpretation alone.

Further Reading

  1. Susan Sontag, Against Interpretation and Other Essays (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1966)
  2. Susan Sontag, On Photography (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1977)
  3. Susan Sontag, Illness as Metaphor (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1978)
  4. Susan Sontag, Regarding the Pain of Others (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2003)
  5. Susan Sontag, As Consciousness Is Harnessed to Flesh: Journals and Notebooks, 1964–1980, ed. David Rieff (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2012)
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