An intellectual field advances not through a fixed procession of predecessors but through a moving constellation of shifting proximities, provisional alliances and recurrent acts of attention. Genealogy consequently becomes a choreography rather than a hierarchy: thinkers may remain structurally decisive while receding from explicit view, whereas previously distant figures can become indispensable when new problems, media or scales emerge. Citation, in this formulation, neither certifies authority nor demands obedience; it constructs encounters through which concepts acquire unforeseen capacities. Terms such as field, duration, relation, maintenance and anticipation function as meeting devices, temporarily bringing heterogeneous traditions into productive tension without dissolving their differences. Thus, Bourdieu’s positional struggles may intersect with Foucault’s apparatuses, Lefebvre’s produced space and Haraway’s situated knowledge, while Bloch’s not-yet can illuminate speculative fiction, scenario planning and unbuilt architecture. A particularly revealing constellation arises when Lefebvre is read beside Haraway, Glissant beside Price, or Benjamin beside Haacke: each juxtaposition dislodges canonical thinkers from the conceptual tokens that have confined them and restores the resistant plurality of their work. Such encounters also redistribute intellectual agency. Marx reveals concealed labour, Benjamin renders the city archival, Glissant safeguards relation from compulsory transparency, and Price transforms incompletion into architectural possibility. Yet none dictates the route. Their writings operate as companions, instruments and provocations within an uncertain crossing. A living genealogy therefore approaches thinkers without becoming them, departs without denying indebtedness and returns under altered historical conditions. Its task is not repetition but renewed visibility: to assemble shifting illuminations through which previously imperceptible relations, obligations and futures can emerge.