Socioplastics begins from a simple but demanding proposition: knowledge today is no longer produced only in books, studios, universities, museums or laboratories, but across distributed environments where images, cities, archives, platforms, bodies, citations, datasets, screens and publics operate together. It is therefore not enough to add another theory to the existing map. What is needed is a field architecture: a way of composing relations, stabilising fragments, making complexity legible, and turning thought into a public instrument. Socioplastics names this operation. It is an expanded epistemic practice in which theory becomes structure, structure becomes orientation, and orientation becomes civic use. Its originality is not the fantasy of standing alone. Its originality lies in building a rigorous field from proximity: gathering neighbouring traditions, assigning them operational force, and converting them into a teachable, citable, machine-readable and publicly inhabitable corpus. The project does not treat genealogy as ornament. A genealogy is useful only when it clarifies function. Socioplastics therefore does not ask which names can be placed around the project to make it look important; it asks what each thinker makes possible inside the architecture. Some provide political metabolism. Some provide the archive. Some provide the body. Some provide the city. Some provide technical mediation, environmental damage, repair, performativity, field position, visual montage or public action. The result is not a bibliography but a working anatomy. Each reference becomes a pressure point inside the corpus, and each pressure point helps explain why Socioplastics is not merely a style of writing, but a system for organising contemporary knowledge under conditions of saturation, fragmentation and infrastructural dependence.

The first layer is political-material. Marx supplies the grammar of labour, value, capital, abstraction, metabolism and surplus. Without Marx, the socioplastic reading of platforms, residues, infrastructures and circulation would remain too aesthetic, too atmospheric, insufficiently accountable to extraction. Gramsci adds hegemony: the production of common sense through institutions, culture, pedagogy and organic intellectual labour. Bourdieu gives the field its precise sociological mechanics: habitus, symbolic capital, distinction, position, legitimacy and struggle.