We Testify With our Lives: How Religion Transformed Radical Thought from Black Power to Black Lives Matter

Terrence L. Johnson
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. Considering the writings of Audre Lorde, Toni Cade Bambara, Stokely Carmichael, Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, and James Baldwin, We Testify with Our Lives makes its case through a new narrative of the evolution of Black radicalism from the civil rights movement through the Movement for Black Lives. It forges new insights into Black Power’s vital contributions to debates on ethics, transnational politics, democracy, political solidarity, and freedom―and its potent resources for the ongoing struggle to build democratic possibilities for all.

Read more at Columbia University Press

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The Bonds of Inequality: Debt and the Making of the American City

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Better Living by Their Own Bootstraps: Black Women’s Activism in Rural Arkansas, 1914-1965