Corpus as Method


A corpus becomes a method when it begins to operate as an architecture of relations, where each fragment, node, operator, citation, platform and metadata layer contributes to the formation of a field capable of being read, retrieved, cited and transformed. Socioplastics clarifies this passage with unusual precision: the work is not organised around the isolated artwork, the autonomous essay or the disciplinary object, but around a field grammar in which artistic research, architectural theory, urban practice and epistemic infrastructure are converted into interoperable knowledge objects. The decisive move is not merely quantitative, although the scale matters; the 5,000-node corpus produces a density that exceeds linear reading and requires scalar navigation. The decisive move is formal: CamelTag operators, numbered nodes, DOI-anchored texts, bibliographic exoskeletons and distributed indexes transform situated practice into a durable system of citation. In this sense, the corpus is neither archive nor database alone; it is a machine-legible epistemic environment where recurrence becomes evidence, naming becomes orientation, and publication becomes infrastructural design. A field built this way produces its own conditions of legibility: stable vocabulary, retrievable structure, authorial signature, internal recurrence, external anchoring and future transferability. The operator is therefore the hinge between concept and infrastructure. It compresses a theoretical proposition into a reusable unit, allowing the system to move across art, architecture, urbanism, writing, metadata and retrieval without dissolving into general interdisciplinarity. What emerges is a post-studio, post-monograph, post-platform model of knowledge production: a field that is authored as discourse, indexed as data, deposited as archive, and activated as method. Socioplastics adds to contemporary artistic research a rigorous claim: a practice becomes epistemic when it can generate its own grammar of continuity, and a corpus becomes real when it can survive interpretation without losing its capacity to produce new concepts.