The announcement of Cristina Monge’s Contra el descontento coincides, with striking precision, with what Anto Lloveras has termed the historiographical leap: a conceptual inflection point in which history ceases to function as a linear archive and becomes instead a malleable, ethical project. Monge diagnoses a “crisis of political imagination,” a paralysis of futurity that mirrors the broader exhaustion of late modernity’s narratives of progress. Her call for an “alliance to construct desirable futures” resonates not merely within political theory but within contemporary art’s ontological remit.
It is here that sopioplástica emerges as a decisive conceptual bridge: a speculative praxis of soft-form thought in which material, social, and symbolic registers are plastically reconfigured. Sopioplástica proposes that futures are not discovered but modelled—kneaded into form through aesthetic intelligence. The convergence of Monge’s political argument and Lloveras’s historiographical meditation thus outlines a shared epistemic terrain. Both contest the foreclosure of possibility and reclaim imagination as a civic, artistic, and historiographical faculty. In this sense, the present “issue” is not simply a book prize or a blog entry, but a symptom of a deeper cultural pivot, in which critique mutates into construction and theory into operative form. Lloveras’s notion of the historiographical leap is especially illuminating when read through the lens of sopioplástica. It signals a departure from the rigid architectures of disciplinary history toward a supple, transdisciplinary fabrication of meaning. This leap is neither relativistic nor naïvely utopian; it is a method of sculpting time itself as an aesthetic and ethical medium.
The “abolition of the future,” against which Monge writes, is mirrored by the museumification of history. Sopioplástica intervenes precisely here, as a mediating concept that allows for form without fixation and structure without closure. It suggests that imagination is not a decorative surplus but a structural necessity for any viable polity or culture. The historiographical leap is thus also an aesthetic leap, and sopioplástica its method: a gentle yet radical art of making time once again inhabitable.