The rapid incorporation of artificial intelligence (AI) into domains such as language, education, and cultural output represents not only a technological advancement but also a significant transformation of epistemic, linguistic, and social landscapes. This introductory paper positions the December issue of the Journal of Studies in Language, Culture and Society (JSLCS) as a significant intervention in this transformation. It argues that interdisciplinary dialogue is a crucial scholarly response to the limitations, biases, and cultural entrenchment of contemporary AI systems. The paper advocates for a scholarly assessment that considers both large-scale disruptions and the localized agency of communities within specific sociolinguistic, institutional, and postcolonial frameworks, moving past polarized views of techno-optimism and technological determinism. This analysis employs recent advancements in the AI philosophy, cultural psychology, and critical humanities to critique the integration of statistical prediction with understanding, highlight the biases inherent in generative AI, and emphasize the cultural negotiations necessary for AI adoption in diverse global contexts. This introductory article contextualizes the contributions of this issue within three interconnected thematic clusters: AI as a pedagogical and translational agent; the evolution of teaching and learning paradigms; and the discursive, literary, and sociolinguistic reconfiguration of identity, memory, and power in digitally mediated societies. Collectively, the articles advance genealogical, rhizomatic, and metaphorical perspectives that reconnect technological inquiry with humanistic critique. This issue emphasizes the perspectives of marginalized regions and academic disciplines, placing language, culture, and society at the forefront of discussions regarding responsible, ethical, and culturally attuned AI, thereby encouraging a global, critical, and human-centric conversation among an international audience.
Nadia Idri (Thu,) studied this question.