Maciej Kurzynski, International Journal of Humanities and Arts Computing (IJHAC), 2025 (1), forthcoming.
This article draws upon recent developments in cognitive neuroscience and natural language processing to contribute a techno-cognitive perspective into the “deep reading” vs. “surface reading” debate in literary studies. Research at the intersection of humanities and sciences suggests that narrative experience, including both production (decoding) and reception (encoding) of stories, constitutes a sequentially and hierarchically complex process shaped simultaneously by socio-cultural contexts, sensory-emotional dynamics, and cognitive integration across multiple levels of complexity. This interdisciplinary view contrasts with traditional humanities approaches such as genealogy, which privileges chronological explanations, or structuralism, which neglects extra-textual sources of meaning. This article offers a survey of relevant research findings across multiple domains and discusses the implications of the techno-cognitive approach for literary studies, exemplified in a reading of Zhang Xianliang’s 1985 novel Half of Man Is Woman.