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.