Born of personal epiphany, nurtured through scholarly rigor, and offered in a time of societal upheaval, Positive Prejudice as Interpersonal Ethics is truly a gift. In this exquisitely written book, Sara Kärkkäinen Terian skillfully guides the reader through a thoughtful and thought-provoking framework for understanding how prejudgment, turned positive, can enrich, empower, and elevate relationships and community. Relatable examples—some personal, some hypothetical, some research-based, some widely known—elucidate the carefully crafted theoretical approach. This book is recommended to educators and leaders in the professions, law enforcement, faith communities, educational institutions, and government as they guide uncomfortable conversations around prejudice and bigotry.
— Linda S. Lee, Duke University School of Medicine
This is an existentially and theoretically well-grounded treatment of an issue relevant to contemporary conditions. It invites readers to engage their lives and situations in the hope of finding and transcending individual constraints and living more inclusive lives with a shared sense of a common human destiny! The book merits a wide audience.
— Andrew J. Weigert, University of Notre Dame
So often, in our discourse as well as in deliberations, we all speak of prejudice in the negative. Sara Kärkkäinen Terian, in her book Positive Prejudice as Interpersonal Ethics, calls our attention to another point of view. Using “social psychological studies of interpersonal behavior with focus on prejudice; ethics in terms of respect for persons, i.e. how one could improve the social experience of others; and phenomenology of social relations, i.e. how one experiences oneself in interpersonal situations,” she demonstrates that we encounter prejudice in our daily interactions in terms of our relationships and the respect we grant or deny others. Viewed thus, prejudice becomes more than a social problem and becomes a way of understanding ourselves in relationship to others. As such, prejudice becomes not an attitude to avoid but in its positive form an approach to adopt for better intrapersonal and interpersonal relations.
This volume offers a thought-provoking, challenging, and insightful look at the issue of prejudice. Given recent developments in our nation and world, it is timely. We need to listen to its message, confront our suppositions, and “gear our attitudes toward others in a positive direction.”
— Bertram L. Melbourne, Howard University School of Divinity