Showing posts with label nonfiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nonfiction. Show all posts

The Humanitarian AI Series A Tale Teller Club Press collection by Sarnia de la Maré FRSA

 The Humanitarian AI Series  A Tale Teller Club Press collection by Sarnia de la Maré FRSA

The Humanitarian AI Series

A Tale Teller Club Press collection by Sarnia de la Maré FRSA

At the intersection of empathy and automation, The Humanitarian AI Series explores how intelligent systems are reshaping activism, creativity, and moral responsibility. Across four books, Sarnia de la Maré examines how artificial intelligence reflects—and can reform—the ethical and cultural codes of modern society.

From feminist algorithms and inclusive design to creative collaboration between humans and machines, the series invites readers to imagine a world where technology and compassion evolve together.

Book 1: Empathy in Algorithms: AI’s Role in Inclusive Feminist Activism
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Book 2: Artificial Intelligence in Music: Blending Creativity and Technology
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Book 3: Feminism, AI, Big Tech, and Societal Issues: Navigating the Nexus
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Book 4: The Humanitarian AI: Accountability, Autonomy, and Aid in the Age of Agentic AI (Going Live)
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📚 Published by Tale Teller Club Press
Brighton · London · Online


Books in this series (3 books)

1

A study of AI and gender inclusivity.


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$10.00
2

Part of a series of non-fiction essays that consider useful fairness and appropriation of AI in the creative arts.


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$10.00
3

Feminism is an important contributor to the future of societies. AI is running the risk of ignoring its value.
We already see the rise of misogyny and sexism in AI creation.
This book looks at ways interested parties and business organisations might change the inevitable outcomes if we ignore the tide.
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$9.99

Author Insight

Sarnia de la Maré FRSA writes from the edge of art and ethics, where technology becomes a mirror for the human condition. The Humanitarian AI Series was born from years of reflection on how machines inherit our hopes, fears, and inequalities.

Each book is an act of optimism — a belief that intelligence, whether organic or artificial, can serve empathy rather than replace it. Through feminist analysis, creative inquiry, and philosophical clarity, the series invites readers to rethink progress as something measured not in speed or scale, but in decency.

“The question is not whether machines can think,” de la Maré writes, “but whether they can care — and whether we still can.”