If we in teacher education want emerging teachers to inquire into the compl
exities of authority and to reimagine how it might operate in schools, then
we need first-hand experience troubling it in our own classrooms. To this
end, we - three reading education professors - problematized our classroom
authority as we sought to enact critical inquiries with preservice teachers
. In this qualitative study, our contention is that preservice teachers, in
addition to eventually having to manage curriculum, must also face the rea
lity of having to function as authority figures while still maintaining a c
lassroom conducive to meaning making. However, in order to interrupt their
traditional images of teacher as authority figure, they need to experience
contrasting images. This article provides three lenses through which to exp
lore how authority can be reimagined in critical-inquiry reading education
courses.