SOCIOPLASTICS 2907 · SerialDissemination

SOCIOPLASTICS 2907 · SerialDissemination

The Field Built One Publication at a Time

CORE V · Legibility Infrastructure · Tome III

Author: Anto Lloveras · LAPIEZA-LAB · Madrid · 2026

ORCID: 0009-0009-9820-3319

Node: 2907 · Layer: Legibility Infrastructure · Series: Core V · Nodes 2901–2910

Tracker: 2907-TRACKER · System ID: SOCIOPLASTICS-2026-CORE-V

Requires: 2906-HybridLegibility · Precedes: 2908-VerticalSpine

Version: v1.0.0 · Date: 2026 · License: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

Slug: socioplastics-2907-serialdissemination-the-field-built-one-publication-at-a-time

PDF: Download full paper PDF

DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19920041

Zenodo record: https://zenodo.org/records/19920041

Abstract

SerialDissemination defines the field as something constructed through repeated publication rather than single announcement. Within Core V, the Socioplastics corpus becomes legible because each node enters circulation as part of an ordered sequence, producing continuity, recognition and cumulative epistemic pressure.

The field is built one publication at a time. Each DOI, PDF, blog post, metadata surface and index entry does not merely add quantity; it reinforces a rhythm of appearance. Seriality transforms isolated textual acts into a recognisable research infrastructure.

Within Core V, SerialDissemination follows HybridLegibility by extending dual readability into temporal propagation. A node must be readable by humans and machines, but it must also arrive in sequence. Dissemination becomes structural when repetition produces field coherence.

Keywords

SerialDissemination; Socioplastics; Anto Lloveras; LAPIEZA-LAB; Core V; Legibility Infrastructure; Serial Publication; Field Formation; DOI; Zenodo; Academic Blog; Metadata; Indexing; Distributed Corpus; Publication Rhythm; Epistemic Infrastructure; Tome III.

Protocol Order

SEQUENCE: position each node within a numbered publication order.

PUBLISH: release the node through PDF, DOI, repository and blog infrastructure.

REPEAT: sustain the rhythm of appearance across the corpus.

ACCUMULATE: convert repeated publication into field density and archival mass.

COHERE: allow serial dissemination to generate recognisable epistemic architecture.

Deployment Context

Serial working paper system; Zenodo repository; Blogger publication channel; DOI infrastructure; master index; Google Scholar metadata layer; long-form transdisciplinary corpus; staged research dissemination.

Validation Metric

SerialDissemination is validated when successive nodes remain individually citeable while also producing cumulative recognition as part of a coherent numbered field.

Core Statement

SerialDissemination converts publication into field construction. The corpus becomes visible not through a single object, but through repeated, ordered, DOI-anchored releases that accumulate into epistemic infrastructure.

Genealogical Articulation

SerialDissemination resonates with serial art, conceptual publishing, archival accumulation and scholarly periodical culture. It extends the logic of the series into epistemic infrastructure: each publication is autonomous, yet its full force emerges through repetition, numbering and recurrence. Within Socioplastics, seriality is not administrative convenience but field-making technique.

References

Drucker, J. (2014). Graphesis: Visual Forms of Knowledge Production. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Foucault, M. (1972). The Archaeology of Knowledge. New York: Pantheon Books.

Lippard, L.R. (1973). Six Years: The Dematerialization of the Art Object from 1966 to 1972. New York: Praeger.

Siegelaub, S. and Wendler, J.W. (1968). Xerox Book. New York: Seth Siegelaub.

Autonomy Clause

Node 2907 operates as an independent executable unit within Core V of Socioplastics. It can be read separately as a theory of serial publication as field formation, while also functioning as the seventh node in the Legibility Infrastructure sequence.

Canonical Citation

Lloveras, A. (2026). Socioplastics 2907 · SerialDissemination: The Field Built One Publication at a Time (v1.0.0). LAPIEZA-LAB, Madrid. DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19920041.