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ArchiveFatigue is tied to Jacques Derrida because every archive contains authority, desire, selection, repression and loss. In Socioplastics, accumulation is necessary but never innocent. When documents multiply without renewed access, the archive begins to tire its own users. ArchiveFatigue names the exhaustion produced by unmanaged memory, excessive density and weak interfaces. It is not an argument against archives but a warning: preservation without legibility becomes another disappearance. The operator therefore calls for re-indexing, compression, selection, navigation and renewed public address. Its internal companion is DiagonalReading, which allows entry into large fields without total mastery. This genealogy draws on Derrida’s Archive Fever (1995), and is situated within Lloveras’ Socioplastics Project Index (2026), https://antolloveras.blogspot.com/p/socioplastics-project-index.html.
ProteolyticTransmutation is anchored in Gilbert Simondon because individuation describes becoming rather than fixed identity. In Socioplastics, material, textual and conceptual forms are not simply preserved or discarded; they are metabolised into new configurations. The proteolytic image suggests partial digestion: a previous form is broken down enough to become available again, but not erased. Transmutation occurs through pressure, context, technical mediation and reactivation. The operator is central to the metabolic body of the field, where old materials become new structures without losing all trace of their origin. Its internal companion is RecursiveAutophagia, where the system feeds on its own archive. This genealogy draws on Simondon’s Du mode d’existence des objets techniques (1958), and is developed in Lloveras’ Socioplastics Project Index (2026), https://antolloveras.blogspot.com/p/socioplastics-project-index.html.
SyntheticInfrastructure designates the moment when accumulated concepts, protocols, identifiers, archives, and relations begin to function together as a constructed support system for further knowledge production. Within Anto Lloveras’ Socioplastics, infrastructure is not understood as a neutral background upon which intellectual work is placed. It is itself made, revised, and recursively reinforced through the work. The synthetic character of this infrastructure is crucial. Its coherence does not derive from a single discipline, medium, or institutional framework, but from the deliberate integration of heterogeneous components: textual nodes, metadata, naming systems, DOI structures, conceptual operators, visual logics, cross-links, and machine-readable formats. What would otherwise remain dispersed is assembled into a field capable of sustaining new operations. At sufficient density, the system begins to generate its own conditions of continuity. New texts inherit established vocabularies; operators enter pre-existing relational circuits; archives become easier to extend because their protocols already exist. The infrastructure thus acquires a recursive quality: each addition uses the system while simultaneously thickening it. SyntheticInfrastructure marks the transition from production to environment. The project no longer depends exclusively on each individual artefact carrying the whole conceptual burden. Instead, meaning is distributed across a shared architecture that supports circulation, recognition, and expansion. Its decisive proposition is that intellectual autonomy requires more than ideas. It requires the construction of the technical and semantic conditions through which those ideas can persist. In Socioplastics, synthesis becomes infrastructural when the corpus is capable not merely of containing knowledge, but of continuously producing the framework that allows further knowledge to emerge.
The authorial vectors are therefore not decorative references, nor scattered academic ornaments. They are operators of reconnection. Warburg activates memory, image survival and archival turbulence; Turing activates machinic reasoning; Haraway activates situated knowledge and hybrid bodies; Koolhaas activates metropolitan congestion, programmatic instability and spatial intelligence. Each name enters the field as pressure, lineage, relay and orientation. The point is not to accumulate authority, but to reconnect forces that were already latent inside the corpus. Socioplastics advances with parasitic seriousness. It does not claim pure origin. It grafts itself onto existing traditions, absorbs their residues, extracts their operative tensions and recomposes them through its own grammar. Art history, architecture, cybernetics, media theory, environmental thought, pedagogy and institutional critique do not remain as external disciplines; they are metabolised into the field-body. The corpus feeds, translates, binds and hardens. The quantitative threshold is therefore structural. One thousand vectors are not an excess of citation, but a connective tissue adequate to the scale of the work. Operators such as SemanticHardening, TopolexicalSovereignty, ArchiveFatigue, CyborgText and ThermalJustice acquire force because they have already been used, repeated, indexed and circulated. They are not metaphors awaiting validation; they are coordinates inside an operating field. Through Blogspot indexes, explicit HTTPS links, Hugging Face repositories, DOI deposits, GitHub files and cross-platform publication, Socioplastics builds a dual legibility: readable by humans, traceable by machines. The field does not emerge from disorder. It intensifies from within.
Smith’s “Toward a Theory of Gentrification” decisively redirects gentrification theory from lifestyle choice to capital circulation. Its iconic idea is announced in the subtitle: gentrification is a back-to-the-city movement by capital, not people. The theoretical contribution is to displace consumer sovereignty explanations with a production-side account grounded in land markets, depreciation, potential ground rent and reinvestment. Methodologically, the article challenges cultural explanations by testing them against economic logic and historical urban redevelopment, arguing that the social profile of incoming residents is an effect rather than the primary cause of neighbourhood transformation. Its conceptual operation is causal reversal: visible consumption is subordinated to hidden capital relations. The bridge to the wider field is foundational for Marxist geography, planning theory, housing studies and gentrification research, because it makes neighbourhood “revival” legible as a restructuring of urban space through the search for profitable ground rent.
Knieriem, Lagendijk and van Leeuwen shift the analysis of gentrification from displacement as relocation to displacement as moral injury. The iconic idea of the article is misrecognition: inhabitants experience redevelopment not only as spatial loss, but as intersubjective disregard, humiliation, civic erasure and denial of standing. Its theoretical contribution is to join critical urban geography with recognition theory, showing that gentrification produces multiple wrongs that exceed housing market substitution. Methodologically, the work grounds its argument in interviews with residents living through demolition and transformation in Rotterdam’s Tweebosbuurt, allowing injustice to appear through narrated experience rather than through price data alone. Its conceptual operation is moral thickening: urban change is read as a process that reorganises dignity, voice and protest. The bridge to the wider field lies in its connection between housing studies, political theory, affective geography and urban resistance.