“…Our conceptualization of the espacio emergente takes inspiration from DLBE's fourth goal and is already under construction and unfinished (Freire, 1997), as critically imbued work in bilingual teacher preparation has been actively committed to interrogating power, historicizing bilingual education processes, listening critically, and engaging with discomfort. This espacio emergente has been theorized and documented through, among other things, a) the integration of translanguaging theory, stances, and pedagogy (Caldas, 2019a(Caldas, , 2019bCaldas et al, 2018;Collins et al, 2019;Musanti & Rodríguez, 2017); b) arts-based pedagogies (Caldas, 2017(Caldas, , 2018; c) a focus on biliteracy practices and events (Brochin Ceballos, 2012; Rodríguez-Mojica & Briceño, 2019); and d) language ideologies in practice (Nuñez & Espinoza, 2019). As Cervantes-Soon (2018) argues, the current neoliberal hijacking of bilingual education demands boldness, strategic agency, and at times subversive actions in piecemeal ways and through critically conscious practices that interrogate power, historicize bilingual education processes, and promote critical listening and experiencing discomfort.…”