Olga Tokarczuk, Facebook Comment Sections, Roland Barthes, Jacques Lacan, and the Future of Creativity
On a quiet day in May 2026, a Nobel Prize-winning novelist made what should have been an unremarkable confession.
Olga Tokarczuk admitted that she uses artificial intelligence as part of her creative process.
Within hours, social media erupted.
Some readers called her a fraud.
Others suggested that her Nobel Prize should be revoked.
One commenter dismissed her outright:
"She's a hack."
Another announced:
"Goodbye Nobel credibility."
A third declared:
"She's no longer a writer."
Yet amid the outrage, a few readers pointed out something curious. Tokarczuk had explicitly stated that AI was being used primarily for research and preliminary information gathering rather than for writing her novels.
The distinction barely mattered.
The anger had already found its target.
What unfolded beneath the article was not merely a debate about artificial intelligence. It was a public performance of something much older: humanity's struggle to understand creativity, originality, and the mysterious relationship between language and the people who use it.
The comments became a kind of accidental philosophical laboratory.
And what they revealed was far more interesting than anything Tokarczuk herself had said.
A Comment Section as a Cultural X-Ray
Reading through hundreds of responses, one quickly notices that people are not arguing about the same thing.
- Some are defending art.
- Some are defending identity.
- Some are defending employment.
- Some are defending a romantic image of the solitary genius.
And some are fighting entirely different political battles using AI as a convenient weapon.
The discussion splits into recognizable tribes.
- The Purists insist that authentic creativity must remain untouched by machines. The very presence of AI is viewed as contamination.
- The Pragmatists accept AI for research, editing, and fact-checking but reject its use as a co-author.
- The Optimists compare AI to calculators, cameras, and word processors—tools that were once feared but eventually absorbed into everyday life.
- The Traditionalists mourn the loss of a particular image of the artist: alone, struggling, wrestling with language in isolation.
- The Skeptics distrust the corporations behind AI more than the technology itself.
And the Culture Warriors use the debate to settle older ideological disputes that have little to do with artificial intelligence.
What is striking is that almost none of these groups are discussing the technical capabilities of AI.
Instead, they are debating a symbolic question:
What makes a human creator special?
The intensity of the reactions suggests that something deeper is at stake.
The Strange Return of the Author
To understand why, we need to travel backward.
Not to Silicon Valley.
Not to OpenAI.
Not even to the dawn of computing.
We need to return to Paris in 1967.
That was the year Roland Barthes published one of the most influential essays in modern literary theory: The Death of the Author.
Barthes challenged an assumption that most readers take for granted.
We often believe that the meaning of a text originates inside the mind of its author.
To understand a novel, we seek the author's intentions.
To understand a poem, we search for the poet's inner experience.
Barthes rejected this entire framework.
Writing, he argued, is not the expression of an isolated consciousness. Rather, it is the recombination of cultural materials, linguistic structures, quotations, references, and inherited forms that already exist within society. Language precedes the writer. Culture precedes the writer. Texts precede the writer.
The writer is less an inventor than a point of intersection.
Meaning emerges not from the author's intentions but from the interaction between text and reader.
At the time, this idea seemed radical.
Today it feels almost prophetic.
Because the arrival of AI has produced an extraordinary reversal.
For decades literary theorists declared the author dead.
Now everyone suddenly wants to resurrect him.
As noted in my recent paper, contemporary readers increasingly ask not:
"What does this text mean?"
but:
"Who wrote this text?"
The dead author has returned.
Not as a source of meaning.
But as a certificate of legitimacy.
Claude Shannon's Ghost
The story becomes even stranger when we introduce a man who never intended to influence literary theory at all.
In 1948, Claude Shannon published A Mathematical Theory of Communication, laying the foundations of information theory.
Shannon's revolutionary move was to separate information from meaning.
A communication system, he demonstrated, does not need to understand messages in order to process them.
It only needs to recognize patterns.
Language contains statistical regularities.
Certain words tend to follow other words.
Certain phrases occur more frequently than others.
Future linguistic elements can therefore be estimated from prior linguistic context.
That insight, simple as it sounds, eventually became the foundation upon which modern language models were built.
ChatGPT is not a conscious novelist trapped inside a machine.
It is an extraordinarily sophisticated pattern-recognition system operating on principles that Shannon helped reveal almost eighty years ago.
This is why the current debate feels so unsettling.
The machine appears to produce meaning while relying on mechanisms that do not resemble human understanding.
When Shannon Meets Barthes
At first glance, Shannon and Barthes appear to inhabit different universes.
One was a mathematician.
The other a literary critic.
Yet they converge in a surprising place.
Shannon showed that language contains statistical structure.
Barthes showed that writing emerges from pre-existing linguistic and cultural structures.
Together, they undermine a cherished myth.
The myth that language begins with an autonomous individual.
As argued in my paper, generative AI becomes "a philosophical event" because it operationalizes a vision of language that twentieth-century thinkers had already begun to uncover. Language increasingly appears "not as the expression of an isolated consciousness but as a dynamic system of probabilistic relationships."
In other words, AI did not invent the idea that language exceeds the individual speaker.
It merely made that idea visible.
Lacan and the Missing Speaker
Yet something remains unresolved.
If AI is merely another manifestation of language's underlying structures, why does it provoke such anxiety?
This is where Jacques Lacan becomes indispensable.
Lacan argued that human beings instinctively search for a subject behind language.
Whenever we encounter words, we assume there is someone behind them.
- Someone speaking.
- Someone intending.
- Someone desiring.
Language is never merely information.
It is also evidence of a person.
Artificial intelligence disrupts this assumption.
For perhaps the first time in history, people regularly encounter coherent discourse while simultaneously knowing that no lived experience stands behind it.
- No childhood.
- No heartbreak.
- No memory.
- No fear.
- No mortality.
As I argued in my paper, the question:
"Was this written by a human or by AI?"
often conceals a deeper question:
"Where is the subject behind these words?"
The emotional force of the AI debate begins to make sense.
The anxiety is not fundamentally about technology.
It is about absence.
Readers are searching for a speaker and finding a statistical process instead.
The Real Difference Between Humans and Machines
At this point many discussions become confused.
People often assume that defenders of AI believe humans and machines are identical.
That is not the argument.
Lacan offers a crucial distinction.
Human beings are creatures of lack.
We desire because we are incomplete.
We write because something troubles us.
We create because something is missing.
A novel is often born from longing.
A poem from grief.
A philosophy from uncertainty.
Human writing is haunted by desire.
Machine writing is haunted only by probability.
That distinction remains profound.
The question is not whether AI can replicate desire.
It cannot.
The question is whether desire has always been the sole source of textual meaning.
And that is a far more difficult question.
The Olga Tokarczuk Paradox
This brings us back to Tokarczuk.
What makes the controversy so revealing is that she occupies a relatively moderate position.
She is not advocating machine-written novels.
She is not surrendering artistic judgment to algorithms.
She is using AI in a manner similar to how many writers use search engines, encyclopedias, archives, databases, or research assistants.
Yet the reaction was explosive.
Why?
Because the controversy was never truly about her.
Tokarczuk became a screen onto which society projected its anxieties.
For some, AI symbolizes cultural decline.
For others, technological progress.
For others still, the collapse of human uniqueness itself.
The novelist became secondary.
The symbolic conflict became primary.
Inspecting the Corpse
For more than half a century, literary theory has been quietly dismantling the myth of the autonomous author.
Barthes challenged it.
Foucault questioned it.
Lacan destabilized the very subject presumed to stand behind it.
Most of these debates remained confined to universities and specialist journals.
Artificial intelligence changed that.
Suddenly ordinary readers found themselves confronting questions that philosophers, psychoanalysts, and literary theorists had been wrestling with for decades.
- Who speaks when language speaks?
- Where does meaning come from?
- How original is originality?
- What exactly is creativity?
The remarkable thing about the Olga Tokarczuk controversy is not that a Nobel laureate uses AI.
The remarkable thing is that a simple Facebook post accidentally reopened one of the deepest intellectual debates of the last century.
Perhaps artificial intelligence has not introduced a crisis of authorship at all.
Perhaps it has merely revealed a crisis that was already there.
After all, artificial intelligence did not kill the author.
Roland Barthes performed that execution in 1967.
What generative AI has done is something far more unsettling.
It has invited millions of ordinary readers to gather around the grave and ask whether there was ever a sovereign author buried there in the first place.





