Socioplastics · Field Console v2.0 System Architect: Anto Lloveras
LAPIEZA-LAB · Madrid · 2009–present
Architecture as epistemic infrastructure
Books30
Nodes3 000
Cores5
CamelTags60
DOI Anchors50+
LAPIEZA Series180+
Artists150+
LayerACTIVE
CamelTags
60 / 120
Tomes
3 / 5 complete
2009–12Foundational
2013–19Expansive
2020–22Recreo
2023–24Biennial
2025–Ruralist ●
01 ◈Project IndexField identity · origin
02 ◉Master IndexBooks 01–30 · all nodes
08 ◍Core DOI Index5 cores · camel-tagged
03 ▣DatasetMachine-readable index
04 ▤ArchiveWayback trace layer
05 ◻LAPIEZA Origin2009–2025 archive
06 ◎ORCIDAuthor record
07 ◎OpenAlexResearch graph
09 ◎WikidataSemantic anchor
10 □SSRNPaper access
Core IDecaloguenodes 501–510
FlowChanneling501
CamelTagInfrastructure502
SemanticHardening503
StratumAuthoring504
ProteolyticTransmutation505
RecursiveAutophagia506
CitationalCommitment507
TopolexicalSovereignty508
PostdigitalTaxidermy509
SystemicLock510
Core IIStratigraphicnodes 991–1000
NumericalTopology991
DecalogueProtocol992
ScalarArchitecture993
RecurrenceMass994
ConceptualAnchors995
HelicoidalAnatomy996
TorsionalDynamics997
LexicalGravity998
TransEpistemology999
StratigraphicField1000
Core IIIField Structurenodes 1501–1510
Linguistics1501
ConceptualArt1502
Epistemology1503
SystemsTheory1504
Architecture1505
Urbanism1506
MediaTheory1507
Morphogenesis1508
Dynamics1509
SyntheticInfrastructure1510
Core IVField Formationnodes 2501–2510
EpistemicLatency2501
ActivationNode2502
AutonomousFormation2503
StructuralCoherence2504
MapDimensioning2505
MeshEngine2506
GravitationalCorpus2507
PortHypothesis2508
AgonisticSpace2509
ThresholdClosure2510
Core VLegibilitynodes 2901–2910
CyborgText2901
OperationalWriting2902
DistributedInscription2903
DualAddress2904
MetadataSkin2905
HybridLegibility2906
SerialDissemination2907
VerticalSpine2908
MasterIndex2909
LegibleArchive2910
FlowChannelingCamelTagInfrastructureSemanticHardeningStratumAuthoringProteolyticTransmutationRecursiveAutophagiaCitationalCommitmentTopolexicalSovereigntyPostdigitalTaxidermySystemicLockNumericalTopologyDecalogueProtocolScalarArchitectureRecurrenceMassConceptualAnchorsHelicoidalAnatomyTorsionalDynamicsLexicalGravityTransEpistemologyStratigraphicFieldLinguisticsConceptualArtEpistemologySystemsTheoryArchitectureUrbanismMediaTheoryMorphogenesisDynamicsSyntheticInfrastructureEpistemicLatencyActivationNodeAutonomousFormationStructuralCoherenceMapDimensioningMeshEngineGravitationalCorpusPortHypothesisAgonisticSpaceThresholdClosureCyborgTextOperationalWritingDistributedInscriptionDualAddressMetadataSkinHybridLegibilitySerialDisseminationVerticalSpineMasterIndexLegibleArchiveBodyArchive ·TerritorialListening ·SlowSedimentation ·AffectiveLoad ·SerialDuration ·SituatedFriction ·NomadInscription ·FieldThreshold ·EcologicMemory ·RelationalGravity · [60→120]
■ Core I · Decalogue■ Core II · Stratigraphic■ Core III · Field Structure■ Core IV · Formation■ Core V · Legibility- - - proposed · second half
nodes 801–810Urban Essaysfigshare.31563508+
nodes 1441–1450Kuhn as Toolfigshare.31940109+
nodes 1401–1410+Cyborg Text Seriesblog.2026/1401+
node 750Gravitational Corpuszenodo.18792486
Summary
Books01–30
Nodes0001–3000
CoresI–V
CamelTags60 / 120
DOI Anchors50+
StatusACTIVE
Research anchors
ORCID0009-0009-9820-3319
OpenAlexA5071531341
WikidataQ139530224
DatasetHuggingFace
ArchiveWayback
SSRN6524618
Citation
Lloveras, A. (2009–ongoing). Socioplastics — Project Index. LAPIEZA-LAB, Madrid.
Contactantolloveras@gmail.com
lapieza-lab.es

Zenodo Has Fifty Papers. Next Is ResearchGate * Why Socioplastics Now Enters the Academic Social Layer




Socioplastics has reached a decisive infrastructural threshold: fifty DOI-anchored research objects now exist as a public corpus. This matters because fifty papers are no longer perceived as isolated uploads. They begin to operate as a field condition. The Project Index already names this transition with clarity: “50 DOI-anchored research objects. 25 indexed books. One public field.” It also frames Socioplastics as a long-duration transdisciplinary research framework developed through writing, indexing, conceptual construction, and infrastructural fixation across architecture, urban theory, epistemology, systems theory, media theory, and conceptual art. That is the essential point: Zenodo has become the ground. It fixes the papers, stabilises the DOIs, gives each object a durable citation layer, and proves that Socioplastics is not merely a sequence of posts or essays. It is now an archive with mass. The DOI layer changes perception because it turns production into scholarly infrastructure. The list itself becomes evidence: recurrence, naming, authorship, metadata, versioning, and public accessibility are visible before the reader even opens a single paper. ResearchGate is the next layer because the field now has enough weight to circulate without looking provisional. It should not replace Zenodo. It should mirror it selectively. Zenodo remains the canonical deposit; ResearchGate becomes the academic social façade. Its role is not preservation but encounter: profile visibility, paper discovery, downloads, recommendations, lateral academic recognition, and reader proximity. Where Zenodo fixes the work, ResearchGate lets the work move. This distinction protects the architecture. The Project Index remains the master threshold. Zenodo remains the sovereign archive. ResearchGate becomes the corridor where scholars first meet the corpus. The correct gesture now is simple: upload the most readable DOI-backed papers first, especially field introductions, Core summaries, methodological essays, and texts that explain why Socioplastics matters. The hard core stays in Zenodo; the legible doorway opens in ResearchGate. The sequence is therefore coherent: first build the archive, then build the social surface. Fifty DOI papers make the archive undeniable. ResearchGate now gives that archive a public academic face. 

LAPIEZA-LAB · Madrid · 2009–present

Socioplastics Core DOI Index

Core publications, DOI anchors, console routes and related research spines.

This page gathers the hardened research anchors of Socioplastics: Cores, DOI sequences, console layers, spin-off papers and major indexed blocks. It does not replace the Field Console. It stabilises the citation spine.


Core V · Legibility Infrastructure · Nodes 2901–2910

2901 CyborgText
2902 OperationalWriting
2903 DistributedInscription
2904 DualAddress
2905 MetadataSkin
2906 HybridLegibility
2907 SerialDissemination
2908 VerticalSpine
2909 MasterIndex
2910 LegibleArchive

Core IV · Field Formation · Nodes 2501–2510

2501 EpistemicLatency
2502 ActivationNode
2503 AutonomousFormation
2504 StructuralCoherence
2505 MapDimensioning
2506 MeshEngine
2507 GravitationalCorpus
2508 PortHypothesis
2509 AgonisticSpace
2510 ThresholdClosure

Core III · Field Structure · Nodes 1501–1510

1501 Linguistics
1502 Conceptual Art
1503 Epistemology
1504 Systems Theory
1505 Architecture
1506 Urbanism
1507 Media Theory
1508 Morphogenesis
1509 Dynamics
1510 Synthetic Infrastructure

Core II · Stratigraphic Field · Nodes 991–1000

991 NumericalTopology
992 DecalogueProtocol
993 ScalarArchitecture
994 RecurrenceMass
995 ConceptualAnchors
996 HelicoidalAnatomy
997 TorsionalDynamics
998 LexicalGravity
999 TransEpistemology
1000 StratigraphicField

Core I · Decalogue Protocol · Nodes 501–510

501 FlowChanneling
502 CamelTagInfrastructure
503 SemanticHardening
504 StratumAuthoring
505 ProteolyticTransmutation
506 RecursiveAutophagia
507 CitationalCommitment
508 TopolexicalSovereignty
509 PostdigitalTaxidermy
510 SystemicLock


Spin-Off DOI Series

750 Gravitational Corpus
801 Rent as Displacement Machine
1447 Architecture · Kuhn as Tool
1450 Cinema · Kuhn as Tool

Console Routes

Core I Console
Core II Console
Core III Console
CyborgText Console
100 Works by Anto Lloveras

Socioplastics · LAPIEZA-LAB · Anto Lloveras

The fields closest to Socioplastics are not closed disciplines but zones of structural adjacency: frameworks that share its concern with organisation, mediation, form-production, and the construction of knowledge. They are not strict precedents so much as operative relatives—neighbouring formations that work on similar problems through different instruments. Socioplastics does not properly belong to any one of them. It emerges instead at their intersection, where epistemology becomes infrastructural and form becomes organisational.





The first and perhaps most immediate proximity is Social Epistemology, because it shares the central question of how knowledge is collectively produced, circulated, validated, and stabilised. Its limit is equally clear: social epistemology describes communities of knowledge; Socioplastics designs them. The second is Systems Theory, from Ludwig von Bertalanffy to Niklas Luhmann. Here lies one of its clearest genealogical spines: form as relation, structure as difference, stability as repeated operation. Socioplastics inherits from systems theory its organisational skeleton, but retools it for cultural and epistemic construction rather than abstract description.

The third is Science and Technology Studies, especially through Bruno Latour, Michel Callon, and John Law. It shares with STS an attention to mediation, infrastructure, inscription, networks, and hybrid assemblages. The distinction is decisive: STS observes systems; Socioplastics projects them. The fourth is Digital Humanities, through its investment in archive, metadata, indexing, machinic legibility, and corpus organisation. Yet the difference remains foundational: digital humanities applies tools to knowledge; Socioplastics converts infrastructure itself into primary practice.

The fifth is Conceptual Art, particularly Joseph Kosuth and Art & Language, from which it inherits its propositional, taxonomic, and semantic logic. The sixth is Relational Aesthetics, through its understanding of art as social device, interface, and relation-production. The seventh is Media Theory, from Friedrich Kittler to Lev Manovich, whose attention to support, inscription, transmission, format, and interface remains structurally adjacent. The eighth is Cybernetics and complexity theory, through feedback, recursion, adaptation, and self-organisation. More than belonging to any one of these, Socioplastics occupies the active overlap between them. That intersection—between social epistemology, systems theory, STS, media theory, conceptual art, and architecture—is its real family.

 

Why a Corpus Requires Subfields


Socioplastics is not a single discipline pretending to be many; it is closer to a field that contains other fields, including architecture, urbanism, epistemology, systems theory, contemporary art, media theory, political thought, ecology, film, sound, and pedagogy. This distinction matters because the project does not grow by adding topics from the outside; rather, it grows by discovering that certain areas are structurally necessary. Remove architecture, and the project loses its spatial intelligence; remove epistemology, and it loses its theory of knowledge; remove art, and it loses its operative body; remove urbanism, and it loses contact with conflict, territory, and lived space. This is why the internal map of Socioplastics is read as 10 fields and 40 subfields, where the logic of the subfield is far more important than the specific number. A subfield is not a decorative label; it exists when there is evidence inside the corpus in the form of node concentrations, named series, DOI deposits, repeated concepts, dedicated channels, recurring objects, pedagogical experiments, or long-term practices. In that sense, the map is not a claim of prestige but a reading of what is already there. Architecture remains the anchoring field, but architecture here is the design of conditions: epistemic architecture, scalar architecture, synthetic infrastructure, tectonic theory, morphogenesis, and spatial pedagogy. The project treats the node, the book, the archive, the dataset, and the public interface as architectural elements with weight, position, threshold, circulation, and load-bearing functions. Urbanism provides the system’s pressure, bringing cities, infrastructures, displacement, climate, territory, public space, and ecological asymmetry into the field. Socioplastics reads the city not as scenery, but as a layered machine of forces: rent, mobility, access, green space, memory, tourism, abandonment, and civic friction. Epistemology provides the deeper question regarding the conditions under which something becomes knowledge, centering field formation, semantic hardening, trans-epistemology, CamelTags, citation, metadata, and identifiers. The corpus is not only producing texts; it is producing the conditions through which those texts can be found, linked, cited, and stabilized. Contemporary art gives the field its body through LAPIEZA, unstable installations, relational situations, social sculpture, performance, textile work, film, sound, objects, bags, blankets, gestures, residues, and collective actions, proving that Socioplastics was never merely theoretical. The theory comes from practice, the practice generates the vocabulary, and the vocabulary returns as infrastructure. Systems theory explains why the project does not collapse under its own scale, using autopoiesis, recurrence, operational closure, metabolism, pruning, repetition, and emergence to describe how the corpus works. Each new node feeds from previous nodes, each concept returns with more density, and each layer becomes more difficult to remove. Media theory and digital humanities explain why the project belongs to this historical moment, utilizing blogs, datasets, DOIs, Wikidata, ORCID, OpenAlex, Hugging Face, JSON-LD, and archive links as essential parts of the work rather than technical accessories. Political theory enters through sovereignty, institution, conflict, decolonial thought, gentrification, and the right to produce knowledge outside authorized structures. Socioplastics builds a parallel epistemic infrastructure and then makes that infrastructure visible. Ecology enters through environmental psychology, ecological humanities, more-than-human urbanism, land art, microclimate, restorative landscapes, and material erosion, including bodies, plants, weather, waste, textiles, rivers, heat, moss, leaves, and atmospheres. Film, sound, and time-based media give the system duration through Cuerpos Filmados, YouTube Breakfast, Double Sided, Pan de Neve, LACALLE, sonic walks, and documentary fragments. Pedagogy closes the circle; teaching is not secondary but is the place where Socioplastics becomes testable through workshops, studios, lectures, and rhizomatic learning. Ultimately, Socioplastics is a field because it can contain subfields without dissolving into a list. The subfields do not weaken the center; they reveal it. Architecture gives structure, urbanism gives conflict, art gives embodiment, epistemology gives legitimacy, systems theory gives continuity, media theory gives public interface, politics gives sovereignty, ecology gives more-than-human pressure, film and sound give duration, and pedagogy gives transmission. A field becomes real when its parts start needing one another, transforming Socioplastics from a corpus of works into a navigable environment where practices, theories, media, identifiers, archives, and institutions behave as one system.






Core Access

Research Anchors

Semantic Anchors

Public Book Layer

Distributed Channels