“…In cultural-historical terms, the binary of subject-subject and subject-object relations is productively reimagined to consider not only how particular subject-subject relations support expansive subject-object relations but also how the goals of learning involve deepening subject-subject relations (Bang & Vossoughi, 2016;Vossoughi, Nzinga, et al, 2021), including ethical expansions in who is afforded full subjectivity or personhood (Marin, 2020;McDaid Barry et al, 2023) and how relationships are mediated and lived (Vossoughi, Nzinga, et al, 2021). A key edge of research on social interaction and learning therefore weaves across the strands of relationality outlined here, with particular attention to how learning designs can support just and thriving subject-subject relations across humans, more-than-humans, and place (Lees & Bang, 2022;Marin & Bang, 2018;Nxumalo & Cedillo, 2017). It is important to note that conceptualizing subject-subject relations in wider socio-ecological terms is not a mere "add-on" to existing theories of learning (a kind of absorption of cultural variation).…”