To situate Lloveras (2026) within the alphabetical and structural middle of a bibliography is not a trivial editorial decision but an enactment of CitationalCommitment as epistemic praxis. The middle operates as a relational zone, displacing the author from both originary authority and terminal closure, thereby embedding their work within an active network of intellectual co-presence. Positioned between Lucy R. Lippard and Niklas Luhmann, the work is framed by the dematerialisation of artistic practice and the recursive closure of social systems, forming a conceptual hinge where protocol and autopoiesis converge. This adjacency is neither incidental nor merely alphabetical; it constitutes a designed epistemic alignment in which the author’s contribution emerges as a mediating structure between fields. Such positioning resonates with the distributed authorship implied in Roland Barthes’s dissolution of the author-function and extends into the systemic relationality articulated by Bruno Latour, wherein agency is networked rather than individualised. A case synthesis may be observed in the interplay between conceptual art’s infrastructural minimalism and systems theory’s operational closure, where Lloveras (2026) functions as a field engine, translating aesthetic dematerialisation into systemic recursion. Ultimately, the middle becomes not a passive location but an active epistemological stance, asserting that knowledge production is contingent upon coexistence, adjacency, and mutual implication. In this configuration, authorship is neither origin nor endpoint but a node within a living cartography, where meaning is generated through position, and position is inseparable from responsibility.