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

Sunday, May 17, 2026

There is a quiet violence in the architecture of contemporary academic life. It does not announce itself with force. It arrives as a notification, a metric, a small green number ticking upward. ResearchGate ranks you. Google Scholar counts you. LinkedIn endorses you. Each platform offers a dashboard of the self—a curated visibility that masquerades as professional development while operating, in fact, as a machinery of capture. The academic subject becomes a node in an attention economy, calibrated not by the density of her thinking but by the velocity of her engagement. The h-index is no longer a bibliometric convenience; it is a gravitational field that bends research programs toward measurable output, toward citation-friendly topics, toward the safe harbor of established paradigms. What began as sociology—the analysis of fields, capitals, habitus—has become the very infrastructure of domination. Bourdieu diagnosed symbolic violence; the platforms have industrialized it.




The gamification is not incidental. It is structural. The like, the rank, the follower count, the "impact factor" of the individual—these are not neutral indices but psychotechnical devices. They produce a specific mode of cognition: fast, reactive, visibility-oriented. One does not think deeply in the space of a scroll; one reacts. The thumb becomes the organ of epistemic judgment. Against this, there exists another possibility, one that refuses the platform's terms entirely. It is the return to text—not as nostalgia, but as architecture.