--- title: "The second OA liberated article from my Leverhulme Prize: Natural language generation and authorial labour" layout: post image: feature: oa.png --- Some time around 2016 I was invited by Kasia Boddy and David Winters to contribute to a <a href="https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/toc/14678705/2017/59/3">special issue of <i>Critical Quarterly</i> that they were putting together</a>. The issue was centred on notions of authorship in the digital age. This came at an opportune time as I had been playing with training a recurrent neural network on the back corpus of the literary studies journal, <i>Textual Practice</i>, at the time and had some promising results. I felt I could definitely turn this weekend hobbyist project into something of broader interest. Thanks to my Leverhulme Prize, I am pleased to be able to make this article openly accessible from now on in its final version-of-record form. You can [download it from Birkbeck's repository](https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/18690/1/criq.12359.pdf). The article is Eve, Martin Paul, ‘The Great Automatic Grammatizator: Writing, Labour, Computers’, <i>Critical Quarterly</i>, 59.3 (2017), 39–54. The article is openly licensed under a CC BY 4.0 International license. My thanks to the Leverhulme Trust for their invaluable support in making this possible.