CONCEPT
Textual Grain
The material signature of human compositional struggle—the roughness, productive awkwardness, and embodied residue that handwritten and human-written text carries and that AI-generated text systematically lacks, and whose absence constitutes a new and previously impossible kind of bibliographical signal.
Textual grain is the quality that handwritten manuscripts have in abundance and AI-generated prose lacks entirely: the evidence of struggle, of embodied production, of a consciousness working against the resistance of language over time. Jerome McGann’s scholarship established that the material features of a text—what he called the
bibliographical code—carry meaning independently of the words, and that the grain of the manuscript record is among the richest carriers of that meaning. The pressure variation in handwriting that records emotional state, the shift in ink that marks the passage of a day, the crossed-out word that preserves a rejected alternative and thereby reveals the field of possibility within which the chosen word operates: these are not incidental features. They are a text in themselves, a text about the creative process, which the published surface suppresses. AI-generated prose is, by contrast, the first historically significant kind of text that arrives without any such residue. It is smooth in a