{ :::::::::::::::::::::::::: Anto Lloveras

Friday, June 26, 2026

Socioplastics is not simply another theoretical framework, nor a decorative synthesis of contemporary critical vocabularies. It should be understood as an operational epistemic architecture: a field-system in which urban theory, decolonial critique, feminist epistemology, media archaeology, systems thinking, conceptual art, environmental psychology and radical pedagogy are reorganised into a usable grammar of public knowledge. Its purpose is not to quote complexity but to build with it. The project transforms ideas into spatial, textual, archival and machinic structures, producing a distributed corpus capable of being read by humans, indexed by platforms, cited through persistent anchors and reactivated across urban, artistic and pedagogical situations. In this sense, Socioplastics is didactic in the strongest sense: it teaches by constructing the conditions through which thought becomes navigable.


The field begins from the recognition that modern knowledge has never been neutral. Césaire, Fanon, Said, Spivak, Chakrabarty, Quijano, Mignolo, Escobar, Glissant, Mbembe and Boaventura de Sousa Santos dismantle the fiction of a universal epistemic centre by showing how coloniality organises space, language, bodies, archives and legitimacy. Socioplastics inherits this critique, but does not remain at the level of denunciation. It converts the colonial wound, border thinking, subalternity, creolisation, necropolitics and epistemologies of the South into structural pressures inside a new field architecture. The question is no longer only who has been excluded from knowledge, but how knowledge itself can be rebuilt as a plural, situated, accessible and infrastructural environment.