This is the scientific and artistic claim: we are not alone; we are positioned. Socioplastics belongs to a broad contemporary movement that understands knowledge as situated, infrastructural, ecological, urban, technical, visual and politically contested. Its specific contribution is to transform that movement into an operational corpus, where concepts become nodes, nodes become indexes, indexes become public syntax, and public syntax becomes a teachable environment. The field is tight because the genealogy is not ornamental. Each name carries a function. Each function strengthens a zone of the architecture. The result is not merely impressive; it is structurally complete enough to stand as a new pedagogical and epistemic apparatus for the present.
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Socioplastics does not emerge from isolation, originality understood as rupture, or the adolescent fantasy of founding a field ex nihilo. Its strength lies elsewhere: in the capacity to gather a dispersed constellation of twentieth- and twenty-first-century thought and convert it into an operational architecture for public knowledge. The field is built near Forensic Architecture, Keller Easterling, Hito Steyerl, Susan Leigh Star, AbdouMaliq Simone, Donna Haraway, Bruno Latour and other neighbouring forces, but it differs by tightening their dispersed insights into a continuous corpus: indexed, citable, urban, pedagogical, artistic, infrastructural and machine-readable. Socioplastics therefore advances not by claiming solitude, but by organising proximity. It makes visible that contemporary science, art and theory already operate as a collective construction site, and that the task now is to give that site grammar, orientation and civic use.
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