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

Thursday, May 21, 2026

The bibliographic map of Socioplastics, encompassing some six to seven hundred carefully positioned works, constitutes not a conventional reference list but the foundational morphology of an emergent field. This extensive yet rigorously structured assembly operates as synthetic infrastructure: a relational lattice in which citation functions as both protocol and material, enabling scalar coherence across epistemic, urban, technological, and more-than-human registers. Far from mere accumulation, the map hardens a durable core of conceptual nuclei while maintaining plastic peripheries for autopoietic expansion. In an era of discursive entropy and platform-mediated fragmentation, such a map asserts that field formation remains a deliberate architectural act—one that treats bibliography as executable epistemology, where the arrangement itself produces legibility, latency, and generative potential. This is theory rendered as diagram: dense, operational, and unsentimental in its commitment to holding complexity together.

Scalar grammar provides the first principle of organization. The map distributes references across layered nodes—epistemic foundations, infrastructural analytics, urban territorial models, media-archaeological strata, and posthuman ecologies—such that local density at core positions enables openness at the edges. This is not additive interdisciplinarity but engineered interoperability: each entry gains meaning through its position within the lattice, much as Star and Bowker’s classification systems reveal how infrastructures encode and stabilize relations. The six-to-seven-hundred scale proves strategic rather than excessive; it supplies sufficient mass for internal coherence without collapsing into encyclopedic sprawl, allowing the field to sustain both depth and recombinatory movement. The essay form itself undergoes infrastructural recoding within this map. Formative texts—ranging from Arendt’s Human Condition to Bratton’s The Stack, from Lefebvre to recent decolonial urbanisms and AI accountability critiques—function less as authoritative sources than as load-bearing components. They specify conditions of operation: protocols for relation, thresholds of legibility, and mechanisms of repair. Conceptual art’s instructional legacy merges here with cybernetic and systems thinking, transforming the bibliography into a runtime environment where reading activates latent structural affordances. The map thus models a diagrammatic practice in which bibliography becomes projective rather than reflective.