Luis S. Villacañas-de-Castro is Associate Professor at the Faculty of Teacher Education of the University of Valencia, Spain, where he researches and lectures on philosophy of education and language teaching and learning. He has maintained a close relationship with elementary schools in Valencia for nearly a decade and embarked in collaborative projects that have been described in articles published in journals such as Pedagogy, Culture and Society; Journal of Curriculum Studies; Review of Education, Pedagogy, and Cultural Studies; Critical Studies in Education, and TESOL Quarterly. He has also researched on the philosophy of John Dewey and on the educative and democratic foundations of his aesthetic theory through articles published in The European Journal of Pragmatism and American Philosophy, Studies in Philosophy and Education, and Education and Culture. Together with Darío L. Banegas and Emily Edwards, he co-edited the volume Professional Development through Teacher Research: Stories from Language Teacher Educators, published in 2023.
Miguel Corella-Lacasa is Full Professor at the School of Fine Arts of the Technical University of Valencia, Spain. Through many funded research projects, he has reconciled a historical exploration of the field of aesthetics with contemporary approaches to the relationship between art, politics, social activism, and education. Alongside publications like “The baroque. History of an aesthetic concept from interwar Europe to postmodernity”, published in Res Publica in 2023, he has published texts like “The reception of the concept of agonism by artistic theory and practice: Agonism without hegemony” (2018), “Metaphors of politics” (2019), and “Ponerse la piel: an arts-based participatory action research project on isolation of elders”, published in Arte y políticas de la identidad. Corella-Lacasa has also co-edited a special issue of the journal Escritura e Imagen and written and (co-) edited volumes, journal articles, and chapters on the role of art in the work of Antonio Negri, Jacques Ranciere, and Jean-Luc Nancy. Building on the frameworks of psychoanalysis, he has also studied the therapeutic and educational implications of art.