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  1.  27
    We Testify with Our Lives: How Religion Transformed Radical Thought from Black Power to Black Lives Matter.Terrence L. Johnson - 2021 - Columbia University Press.
    Police killings of unarmed Black people have ignited a national and international response unlike any in decades. But differing from their civil rights-oriented predecessors, today’s activists do not think that the institutions and values of liberal democracy can eradicate structural racism. They draw instead on a Black radical tradition that, Terrence L. Johnson argues, derives its force from its unacknowledged ethical and religious dimensions. We Testify with Our Lives traces Black religion’s sustained influence from SNCC to the present, reconstructing a (...)
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  2.  4
    Black Faith and the Ethics of Human Dignity in advance.Terrence L. Johnson - forthcoming - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics.
    Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s theology and rights-based activism remain highly relevant in a constitutional democracy. However, King’s use of human dignity in his early sermons as an extension of political rights faces serious challenges from Black leftist political writers and the Black Lives Matter movement. At issue is the extent to which human dignity should be examined as a distinct political, aesthetic, and moral category that must be explored and embraced more explicitly and wholeheartedly in Black politics and political (...)
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  3.  28
    On the Limits of Rights and Representation.Terrence L. Johnson - 2015 - Journal of Religious Ethics 43 (4):697-722.
    This essay explores the degree to which public reason can sustain political liberalism's commitment to justice and pluralism without attending to the role of what Jeffrey Stout calls “cultural inheritance” in shaping and justifying political commitments. At issue is whether public reason is the best resource for guiding conversations on political matters that are enmeshed in religious commitments and moral beliefs. Unless public reason can account for cultural inheritance, and foster a deliberative context in which political actors might grapple with (...)
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    Rethinking Justice from the Margins.Terrence L. Johnson - 2009 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 29 (2):61-79.
    IN THIS ESSAY I USE W. E. B. DU BOIS AND HIS CATEGORY OF TRAGIC SOUL-life in an attempt to expand John Rawls's notion of public reason. As it stands, the divide between religion and politics within Rawlsian political liberalism inadequately attends to the role of moral beliefs, especially those used to justify and reinforce antiblack racism, in forming and fashioning political commitments. By introducing tragic soul-life and Du Bois's category of second sight, I plan to show how a reflective (...)
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  5.  25
    Tragic Soul-Life: W.E.B. Du Bois and the Moral Crisis Facing American Democracy.Terrence L. Johnson - 2012 - Oup Usa.
    A debate on the proper role of religion in politics as one about liberalism's failure to address the moral issues implicated in human suffering, subjugation and death as they emerge within political responses to antiblack racism, imperialism and sexism.
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