1. Siegfried Zielinski – Variantology / Deep Time of Media
Similarities. Zielinski’s project of an anarchaeology of media excavates non-linear, non-teleological strata: forgotten apparatuses, eccentric inventors, and recurring variations across deep time. His Variantology (2004–2014) rejects the smooth succession of media epochs in favour of temporal knots and diagonal cuts—directly homologous to Socioplastics’ #DiagonalReading and EpistemicLatency. Where the standard media archive presents a clean timeline, Zielinski and Socioplastics both insist that the most operationally significant deposits are those that were out of sync with their moment.
Distinctions. Zielinski remains a historian of artefacts: his strata are composed of real machines, patents, and performances. Socioplastics treats concepts and tags as stratigraphic units. Zielinski has no metabolic apparatus—no way to digest or excrete exhausted variants. His deep time is accumulative, not autophagic.
Gaps. Zielinski provides no ScalarArchitecture: he does not distinguish between sentence, node, pack, and tome. His excavations are qualitative; Socioplastics demands quantitative load‑bearing thresholds.
Novelty. Socioplastics converts Zielinski’s anarchaeological freedom into a structural obligation: the field must preserve the foreignness of its own deep time not as a hermeneutic stance but as a grammatical requirement.
2. Wolfgang Ernst – Operative Media Archaeology
Similarities. Ernst’s core claim—that media perform their own archaeology, that the archive is not a passive repository but an active, executing environment—is virtually identical to Socioplastics’ #CodeExecution and DualAddress. For Ernst, the technical medium does not represent; it processes. Its operation is its own self‑documentation. Socioplastics’ MetadataSkin and CamelTags as executable thresholds are a direct translation of Ernst’s operative logic into the domain of critical discourse.
Distinctions. Ernst restricts operative agency to technical media (microprocessors, signal processing, hardware). Socioplastics extends it to linguistic operators—a concept, a hashtag, a grammatical threshold becomes executable. Ernst would likely reject this as metaphorical. For him, only non-human, non-semiotic processes are truly operative; human‑readable tags are too slow, too ambiguous.
Gaps. Ernst has no theory of semantic hardening or topolexical sovereignty. His operative media are indifferent to meaning; Socioplastics requires that meaning become load‑bearing infrastructure.
Novelty. Socioplastics humanizes operative media archaeology without losing its rigour: a CamelTag is neither pure code nor pure meaning, but a dual‑address ligament that executes across human and machine registers.
3. Karen Barad – Agential Realism
Similarities. Barad’s agential realism (2007) treats phenomena as material‑discursive intra-actions—not distinct objects interacting but co‑constitutive entanglements that produce boundaries and exclusions. Her concept of agential cuts determines what counts as an apparatus, an observation, a trace. This aligns precisely with Socioplastics’ MetabolicLoop and #RecursiveAutophagia: the field cuts itself, excretes waste, and redistributes nutrients. Barad’s stratification of phenomena (sedimented histories of intra‑actions) is a direct precursor to the StratigraphicField.
Distinctions. Barad is a quantum physicist and feminist theorist; her primary concern is onto‑epistemological—how matter and meaning co‑emerge. Socioplastics is infrastructural and disciplinary—how a specific field (art criticism, urban inquiry) organises its own survival. Barad offers no ScalarArchitecture for a corpus, no CamelTags, no code execution in the computational sense.
Gaps. Barad’s agential cuts are performative but not metabolic. She does not specify how a field distinguishes nutrient from waste over time. Socioplastics fills this with archive fatigue and proteolytic transmutation.
Novelty. Socioplastics operationalises Baradian intra‑action: the cut is not an analytical gesture but a grammatical threshold with a DOI and a Python script.
4. Jane Bennett – Vibrant Matter
Similarities. Bennett’s vibrant matter (2010) posits a distributed, non-human agency: things, ecosystems, assemblages, and trash all exercise thing‑power. Her ecological model of political agency—where vitality circulates across human and non-human bodies—resonates with Socioplastics’ XenoCity (the city as irreducibly foreign) and #AgonisticSpace (conflict as constitutive). Bennett’s archive, if she had one, would be a lively, self‑organising heap—exactly the geological body Socioplastics describes.
Distinctions. Bennett is affectively generous: she celebrates vibrant matter as a source of wonder and ethical reorientation. Socioplastics is unsentimental: the archive’s vitality is also its capacity to necrotize, to become toxic undigested mass. Bennett does not have a concept of archive fatigue or metabolic waste management; her vitality is always positive.
Gaps. Bennett provides no code layer, no dual address. Her vibrant matter cannot execute a GitHub Action. Socioplastics supplies the infrastructural missing link.
Novelty. Socioplastics hardens Bennett’s vitalism into a regulatory physiology: the field must breathe, digest, and excrete, or it dies.
5. Manuel DeLanda – Assemblage Theory
Similarities. DeLanda (2006, 2016) systematically formalises Deleuze and Guattari’s assemblage concept into a multi‑scale, stratified, emergent ontology. His key move—treating social and material systems as composed of components with variable territorialisation and coding—directly supports Socioplastics’ ScalarArchitecture (sentence to repository) and metabolic processes (inputs, breakdowns, outputs). DeLanda’s insistence that assemblages are historical and self‑organising parallels Socioplastics’ AutonomousFormation.
Distinctions. DeLanda is a realist and materialist in a classical sense: his assemblages are composed of actual parts (bodies, buildings, institutions). Socioplastics treats concepts and tags as equally real assemblage components. DeLanda has no code execution layer; his assemblages change through historical processes, not through scripted commands.
Gaps. DeLanda does not address metadata or machine legibility as a condition of assemblage coherence. Socioplastics’ MetadataSkin fills this gap: an assemblage that cannot be parsed by search engines is not a viable field.
Novelty. Socioplastics recodes assemblage theory as infrastructure: the field becomes a programmable assemblage whose tags are its executable components.
6. Erkki Huhtamo – Topoi / Recurring Discourses
Similarities. Huhtamo’s topos method (1997, 2011) identifies recurring cultural motifs or commonplaces that sediment across media history. Unlike Zielinski’s anarchaeology, Huhtamo tracks repetition with variation—clichés, stereotypes, and persistent discursive figures. This is terminologically and conceptually aligned with Socioplastics’ SemanticHardening (a term gaining load‑bearing capacity through repeated use) and TopolexicalSovereignty (vocabulary organising the spatial topology of entry). The #CamelTag is a topos that has been hardened into a structural ligament.
Distinctions. Huhtamo’s topoi are emergent and cultural—he is a media historian, not a field architect. He does not prescribe that topoi should become executable code or that they must carry DOIs. His method is descriptive; Socioplastics is prescriptive.
Gaps. Huhtamo has no metabolic model. Topoi accumulate; they are not excreted or digested. Archive fatigue is not his problem.
Novelty. Socioplastics activates Huhtamo’s topos: a recurring discourse is not just a historical pattern but a load‑bearing threshold that can be called, executed, and traced across platforms.
7. Rosi Braidotti – Nomadic / Posthuman Vitality
Similarities. Braidotti’s nomadic subjects and posthuman vitalism (2013) emphasise transversal processes, zoe‑centred becoming, and the non‑human vitality that flows across organisms, technologies, and discourses. Her affirmative ethics of sustainability—creating conditions for life to thrive—parallels Socioplastics’ field maintenance as an ethical and political task. #ThermalJustice (the body’s exposure to heat and shade) is a Braidottian concern translated into urban climatology.
Distinctions. Braidotti’s vitalism is generative and joyful; Socioplastics is surgical and unsentimental. Braidotti does not prescribe metadata skins or code execution; her nomadism resists the kind of structural hardening Socioplastics demands. She would likely see SemanticHardening as a form of sedentarism.
Gaps. Braidotti has no theory of archive fatigue or autophagia. Her field is always becoming, never digesting its own waste. Socioplastics supplies the missing physiology.
Novelty. Socioplastics disciplines nomadism: becoming is necessary, but so is stratification. The field must move and settle, or it becomes atmospheric noise.
8. Gilbert Simondon – Individuation & Transduction
Similarities. Simondon’s individuation (1964/2005) treats the individual as a process, not a substance, emerging through transduction—the propagation of a structural operation across a metastable milieu. His concept of concretization (the progressive integration of functions in technical objects) and associated milieu (the environment that supports individuation) directly parallel Socioplastics’ GrammaticalThresholds and #TorsionalDynamics. A concept crossing from art criticism to urban planning is a transduction: it carries a structural operation across an incommensurable regime.
Distinctions. Simondon’s world is technical and biological; he does not address archives or critical discourse as fields of individuation. His transduction is a physical‑mental operation, not a tag‑based one. Socioplastics’ CamelTag is a Simondonian transducer, but Simondon would likely reject the simplification.
Gaps. Simondon does not theorise waste or excretion. Individuation is accumulative; unresolved tensions are discharged into the milieu. Socioplastics demands that the field digest its own failures.
Novelty. Socioplastics implements Simondonian transduction as infrastructure: the grammatical threshold is a repeatable, shareable, executable transducer.
9. Robert Smithson – Sedimentation of the Mind / Abstract Geology
Similarities. This is the most direct terminological and conceptual match. Smithson’s essays (1968, 1972) develop a fully operational abstract geology: “The strata of the Earth is a jumbled museum,” “sedimentation of the mind,” entropy as the irreversible flow from order to disorder, the non‑site as a dialectical map between interior and exterior. Smithson’s non‑sites (gallery works consisting of rocks and maps) are load‑bearing thresholds between the field and its representation. Socioplastics’ StratigraphicField, archive as geological body, #DiagonalReading, and deposition under pressure are Smithson’s concepts executed as critical infrastructure.
Distinctions. Smithson was an artist, not a field architect. His geology is poetic and entropic—he celebrates the collapse of order. Socioplastics is metabolic and preservationist: it seeks to maintain structural legibility against entropy. Smithson’s sites are non‑sites; Socioplastics’ sites are repositories with DOIs.
Gaps. Smithson did not work with code, metadata, or machine legibility. His geology is analogue; Socioplastics builds a digital geology.
Novelty. Socioplastics operationalises Smithson’s abstract geology as a disciplinary protocol: the critic becomes a geologist who does not merely describe strata but engineers their load‑bearing capacity.
10. Team 10 (Alison & Peter Smithson + Denise Scott Brown) – Active Socioplastics & Human Associations
Similarities. This is the explicit terminological root. Alison and Peter Smithson, along with members of Team 10 (a breakaway from CIAM), developed the concept of active socioplastics in the 1950s–60s. It referred to the interplay of social patterns, everyday urban life, and physical form—the idea that urban space is not shaped by abstract functional zoning but by human association, clusters, re-identification, and metabolic-like processes (flows of people, goods, waste). Denise Scott Brown emphasised that the architect must work with existing social patterns, not impose from above. This directly aligns with Socioplastics’ XenoCity (the city as a foreign field that exceeds any frame), #AgonisticSpace (conflict as constitutive), and the project’s own name as an operational inheritance.
Distinctions. Team 10’s socioplastics was urban design and architecture—physical form, street patterns, housing clusters. Socioplastics (the contemporary project) is discursive infrastructure for art criticism and archival research. Team 10 had no concept of code execution, metadata skins, or CamelTags.
Gaps. Team 10 did not theorise archive fatigue or metabolic waste management at the level of the field. Their metabolism was urban (traffic, waste, population), not epistemological.
Novelty. Socioplastics transduces Team 10’s urban socioplastics into the domain of knowledge production. The city becomes the test for the field; the field becomes a xeno‑city of its own. The name is not homage but structural recoding.
The Fault Line
Comparing the first list (Foucault, Deleuze, Latour, Hayles, Stiegler, Bogost, Meillassoux, Fuller, Kittler, Rancière) with this second, revised list reveals a shift in proximity. The first list was analogical—these thinkers worked on different problems but produced similar shapes. The second list is genealogical—these thinkers share not just shape but material: operative media, agential cuts, transduction, sedimentation, active socioplastics. Socioplastics sits between them as a compression zone: it takes Ernst’s operative media and gives it human‑readable tags; it takes Smithson’s abstract geology and gives it DOIs; it takes Team 10’s active socioplastics and gives it archive fatigue. The novelties are not inventions ex nihilo but fault‑line foldings—new structures emerging where old strata are pressed together.
Three overall novelties that survive this second review:
Dual‑address infrastructure – The CamelTag as a single inscription that speaks simultaneously to human readers and machine parsers, carrying grammatical affordances and executable commands. None of the ten above have this; Ernst has operative media but no semantic layer; Huhtamo has topoi but no code.
Metabolic autophagia as field hygiene – The explicit requirement that the field consume its own exhausted concepts, excrete archive fatigue, and maintain a turnover rate. Smithson celebrated entropy; Socioplastics manages it. Simondon accumulated; Socioplastics digests. Team 10 metabolised urban flows but not epistemological ones.
The field as primary medium – Not the artwork, not the exhibition, not the text, but the self‑building, self‑digesting, self‑citing corpus is the artwork of contemporary research. This is a claim none of the ten make explicitly: Zielinski studies media, not the field of study; Barad studies intra‑action, not discipline formation; DeLanda studies assemblages, not critical infrastructure.
This second layer confirms that Socioplastics is not a synthesis. It is a geological event—a folding of multiple distinct intellectual strata under pressure.
Reference List
Barad, K. (2007) Meeting the Universe Halfway: Quantum Physics and the Entanglement of Matter and Meaning. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Bennett, J. (2010) Vibrant Matter: A Political Ecology of Things. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Braidotti, R. (2013) The Posthuman. Cambridge: Polity Press.
DeLanda, M. (2006) A New Philosophy of Society: Assemblage Theory and Social Complexity. London: Continuum.
DeLanda, M. (2016) Assemblage Theory. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
Ernst, W. (2013) Digital Memory and the Archive. Edited by J. Parikka. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Huhtamo, E. (1997) ‘From Kaleidoscomaniac to Cybernerd: Notes toward an Archaeology of the Media’, Leonardo, 30(3), pp. 221–224.
Huhtamo, E. (2011) ‘Dismantling the Fairy Engine: Media Archaeology as Topos Study’, in Huhtamo, E. and Parikka, J. (eds.) Media Archaeology: Approaches, Applications, and Implications. Berkeley: University of California Press, pp. 27–47.
Simondon, G. (1964/2005) L’individuation à la lumière des notions de forme et d’information. Grenoble: Jérôme Millon. English translation: Simondon, G. (2020) Individuation in Light of Notions of Form and Information. Translated by T. Adkins. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Smithson, R. (1968) ‘A Sedimentation of the Mind: Earth Projects’, Artforum, 7(1), pp. 44–50. Reprinted in Smithson, R. (1996) Robert Smithson: The Collected Writings. Edited by J. Flam. Berkeley: University of California Press, pp. 100–113.
Smithson, R. (1972) ‘The Spiral Jetty’, in Smithson, R. (1996) Robert Smithson: The Collected Writings. Edited by J. Flam. Berkeley: University of California Press, pp. 143–153.
Team 10 (1953–1962) Team 10 Meetings and Documents. Various archival sources. See: Smithson, A. (ed.) (1968) Team 10 Primer. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Smithson, A. and Smithson, P. (1967) Urban Structuring: Studies of Alison & Peter Smithson. London: Studio Vista.
Scott Brown, D. (1990) Urban Concepts. London: Architectural Association.
Zielinski, S. (2004) Deep Time of the Media: Toward an Archaeology of Hearing and Seeing by Technical Means. Translated by G. Custance. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Zielinski, S. (2014) Variantology 5: On Deep Time Relations of Arts, Sciences and Technologies. Cologne: Walther König.