Kazuo Shinohara’s “The Autonomy of House Design” advances a severe yet generative proposition: the house becomes architecturally meaningful only when liberated from the habitual authorities that claim to determine it—city, site, family programme, client preference and quotidian use. Rather than treating domestic architecture as a polite accommodation of circumstance, Shinohara recasts it as an autonomous intellectual artefact, capable of confronting the disorderly metropolis without submitting to urban-design rhetoric. His rejection of the site as origin is not indifference to context but a refusal of environmental determinism: beauty must arise from an internal armature of ideas, not from picturesque surroundings or typological convenience. This logic intensifies in his privileging of floor area over demographic data, where the numerical extent of space becomes the latent generator of form, while family composition remains contingent, unstable and contractually finite. The case of the poet Shuntaro Tanikawa’s small house clarifies this ethic: subsequent domestic chaos, children, extensions and altered habits do not retrospectively indict the design, because architectural responsibility is profound but not limitless. Shinohara’s most provocative synthesis lies in his defence of fictional space—the choreographed, published, almost theatrical house-image through which architecture enters society. Such fiction is not deception; it is the medium by which domestic form acquires cultural agency. His proposed “Original House” therefore transforms authorship from bespoke service into reproducible artistic proposition. Ultimately, Shinohara’s manifesto defines the house not as shelter perfected by compliance, but as a disciplined fiction through which architecture contests society.
The Digestive Turn
Bibliography
These references connect strongly with Socioplastics because they all examine how knowledge, territory, visibility and governance are no longer produced only through buildings, institutions or texts, but through infrastructural systems: data platforms, semantic indexes, archives, algorithms, urban logistics, digital twins and cultural protocols. The bibliography forms a theoretical constellation around the same central problem: how form becomes knowledge, and how knowledge becomes infrastructure. Lefebvre supplies the political grammar of urban space; Jiang and Sperandio extend it into smart governance; Quek et al. and KONDA translate it into semantic interoperability; Estlund explains algorithmic visibility; Mounier and Dumas Primbault theorise knowledge infrastructures; Söderström and Datta expose urban data power; UNESCO frames cultural data as a civilisational issue; and logistics theory reveals the material circulation beneath neoliberal space. Together, they position Socioplastics not as a conventional art or architecture project, but as a living epistemic apparatus: an indexed, citational, semantic and territorial system for stabilising public thought.
Estlund, K.M. (2021) A Media Archaeology of Online Communication Practices through Search Engine and Social Media Optimization. PhD thesis. University of Oregon.
Karen M. Estlund’s dissertation A Media Archaeology of Online Communication Practices through Search Engine and Social Media Optimization develops a sophisticated critique of the invisible infrastructures governing communication within contemporary digital environments. Rejecting technologically neutral interpretations of online information systems, the study reconceptualises Search Engine Optimization (SEO) and Social Media Optimization (SMO) not as merely technical marketing practices, but as historically situated sociotechnical mechanisms through which visibility, legitimacy and informational authority are algorithmically negotiated. The dissertation argues that access to information on the contemporary web is increasingly mediated through dominant gatekeeping platforms such as Google, Facebook, Bing and Twitter, whose proprietary algorithms regulate discoverability while simultaneously shaping the conditions under which communication becomes socially consequential. Through a rigorous media archaeological methodology inspired by Foucault, cybernetics and information theory, Estlund traces the evolution of optimisation practices from early information retrieval systems and Shannon’s mathematical communication model to contemporary semantic web architectures and platform capitalism. Particularly illuminating is the demonstration that optimisation strategies are embedded materially within HTML structures, metadata systems, semantic markup, hyperlink architectures and algorithmically preferred formatting conventions. The empirical analyses of archived Los Angeles Times webpages and U.S. Senate campaign websites reveal how journalistic and political institutions progressively adapted their textual organisation, metadata practices and structural coding to comply with evolving algorithmic expectations. Equally significant is the dissertation’s interrogation of so-called “black hat” optimisation practices, exposing how distinctions between legitimate and illegitimate visibility are frequently determined by corporate platform interests rather than universal ethical principles. By integrating communication theory, gatekeeping studies, critical code analysis and politics of information, the dissertation demonstrates that digital visibility is neither neutral nor democratic, but produced through contested systems of infrastructural control, institutional power and optimisation labour. Ultimately, Estlund establishes SEO and SMO as foundational mechanisms of contemporary algorithmic culture, revealing that the struggle for informational access in digital societies increasingly depends upon the capacity to understand, negotiate and strategically intervene within the invisible architectures of computational gatekeeping.
Mounier, P. and Dumas Primbault, S. (2023) Sustaining Knowledge and Governing its Infrastructure in the Digital Age: An Integrated View. Preprint. HAL Open Science.
An Invitation * SOCIOPLASTICS
Lloveras, A. (2026) Socioplastics — An Invitation. LAPIEZA-LAB, Madrid. Available at: https://antolloveras.blogspot.com/p/socioplastics-project-index.html
Anto Lloveras · LAPIEZA-LAB · Socioplastics · Director · antolloveras@gmail.com
ORCID · OpenAlex · SSRN · Wikidata
3210-A-FIELD-CAN-BE-CAREFULLY-DESIGNED
https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.32221680
3209-THE-CORPUS-CAN-BECOME-A-WAY-OF-THINKING
https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.32221659
3208-A-FIELD-NEEDS-SOFT-EDGES-AND-STABLE-CORES
https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.32221587
3207-VISIBILITY-OFTEN-ARRIVES-LATE
https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.32221545
3206-STABLE-POINTS-HELP-OPEN-SYSTEMS-GROW
https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.32221521
3205-DENSITY-CREATES-INTERNAL-COHERENCE
https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.32219949
3204-SCALAR-GRAMMAR-HELPS-KNOWLEDGE-HOLD-TOGETHER
https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.32219925
3203-SCALE-NEEDS-STRUCTURE
https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.32219685
3202-TWO-WAYS-A-FIELD-BEGINS-TO-APPEAR
https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.32219646
3201-FIELD-FORMATION-CAN-BE-READ-THROUGH-STRUCTURE
https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.32217306
Brown, W. (2015) Undoing the Demos: Neoliberalism’s Stealth Revolution. New York: Zone Books.
In Undoing the Demos, Wendy Brown advances a critique of neoliberalism by arguing that its most dangerous effects do not arise merely from market deregulation or corporate domination, but from the emergence of a pervasive neoliberal rationality that transforms every sphere of existence according to economic metrics. Drawing extensively upon Michel Foucault’s lectures on biopolitics while simultaneously revising them, Brown contends that neoliberalism should not be understood simply as an economic doctrine but as a governing form of reason that remakes states, institutions, and subjects in the image of the market. Central to her argument is the figure of homo oeconomicus, no longer conceived as the classical market actor oriented toward exchange, but as human capital perpetually tasked with enhancing its own competitive value. Under neoliberal rationality, individuals cease to exist primarily as political beings capable of collective self-rule and instead become entrepreneurial projects of investment, self-management, and portfolio enhancement. Brown demonstrates that this economization extends beyond markets proper, reorganising education, law, citizenship, governance, and even personal identity through the language of competitiveness, productivity, and investment return. Particularly significant is her claim that democracy is not merely weakened but conceptually hollowed out from within: political principles such as equality, liberty, sovereignty, and public deliberation are translated into economic terms until democratic citizenship itself loses substantive meaning. A paradigmatic illustration appears in her analysis of higher education, where universities increasingly abandon the cultivation of critical citizens in favour of producing economically competitive subjects measured through metrics of efficiency and market utility. Equally significant is her examination of the neoliberal state, which no longer legitimises itself through justice or popular sovereignty but through the management of economic growth, credit ratings, and investor confidence. The enduring contribution of Brown’s intervention resides in its demonstration that neoliberalism constitutes not simply a political-economic order but an ontological transformation of subjectivity itself, one that progressively erodes the conditions necessary for democratic imagination, collective action, and meaningful political freedom.