Results for 'Bearing witness'

974 found
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  1.  44
    Bearing witness: a moral way of engaging in the nurse-person relationship.Rahel Naef - 2006 - Nursing Philosophy 7 (3):146-156.
    For nursing, the idea of bearing witness is of utmost importance. Nurses are present with persons who experience changes in their health and quality of life and who live intense and profound moments of struggling, questioning, and finding meaning. Nurses are also with persons from moment to moment as their lives unfold, and when joy, serenity, contentment, vulnerability, sadness, fear, and suffering are experienced. In this paper, it is proposed that bearing witness is a moral way (...)
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  2.  59
    Bearing Witness and Creative Activism.Sondra Bacharach - 2023 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 81 (2):153-163.
    In this article, I explore the relationship between witness-bearing arts as a form of creative activism designed to respond to social injustices. In the first section, I present some common features of bearing witness, as conceptualized within media studies and journalism. Then I explain how artworks placed in the streets can bear witness in a similar way. I argue that witness-bearing art transmits knowledge about certain unjust and harmful events, which then places a (...)
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  3.  50
    Bearing Witness to Epiphany: Persons, Things, and the Nature of Erotic Life.John Russon - 2009 - State University of New York Press.
    _Makes the novel argument that erotic life is the real sphere of human freedom._.
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  4.  56
    Bearing Witness: The Duty of Non‐indifference and the Case for Reading the News.Brookes Brown - 2023 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 104 (2):368-391.
    Ignorance of current events is ordinarily treated as a moral failing. In this article, I argue that much of this ire is misplaced. The disengaged are no less positioned to do good or dispense beneficence, no more arrogant or complicit than those glued to the headlines. Nonetheless, I contend that citizens do have moral reason to remain informed – they ought not be indifferent to others. This, I show, provides a standing reason to pay attention to distant strangers: by (...) witness, we avoid indifference. It follows that we should reconsider our media diet and our critiques of the disengaged. (shrink)
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  5.  11
    Bearing Witness to Christ and to Each Other in the Power of the Holy Spirit: Orthodox Perspectives.K. M. George - 2013 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 30 (4):267-272.
    In the wider ecumenical movement, bearing witness to each other in true friendship is a creative gesture inspired by the Holy Spirit. It cuts across religious and denominational divides. The friendship between Gandhi and CF Andrews is invoked as an example of East and West bearing witness to each other. In ancient Asian religious context, mutual witnessing is extended to all sentient beings. From the Orthodox tradition three themes are highlighted as contributing to the Spirit-movement for (...)
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  6.  82
    Witnessing Animal Others: Bearing Witness, Grief, and the Political Function of Emotion.Kathryn Gillespie - 2016 - Hypatia 31 (3):572-588.
    This article theorizes the politics of witnessing and grief in the context of the embodied experience of cows raised for dairy in the Pacific Northwestern United States. Bearing witness to the mundane features of dairy production and their impact on cows' physical and emotional worlds enables us to understand the violence of commodification and the political dimensions of witnessing the suffering of an Other. I argue that greater attention should be paid to the uneven hierarchies of power in (...)
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  7.  17
    Bearing Witness: Representing Women's Experiences of Prenatal Diagnosis.Barbara Katz Rothman - 1996 - In Sue Wilkinson & Celia Kitzinger (eds.), Representing the other: a Feminism & psychology reader. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Sage Publications.
  8.  30
    Bearing witness beyond colonial epistemologies: Silvia Rivera Cusicanqui’s critical phenomenology of deep silence.Martina Ferrari - 2021 - Chiasmi International 23:239-260.
    This paper is one in a series of attempts on my part to think through one of the central challenges left to us by Merleau-Ponty’s sudden death in 1961: if we understand the turn, in his later writings, toward an ontology of the flesh as “a radical rethinking of the experience of belonging from within, [as] a phenomenology of being-of-the-world”, how are we to bear witness to such an experience? What modalities are called forth to do justice to this (...)
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  9.  15
    Bearing Witness for the Animal Dead.Kathie Jenni - 2018 - Proceedings of the XXIII World Congress of Philosophy 12:167-181.
    Images of human violence to animals challenge us both psychologically and morally. Sometimes images are so graphic, the treatment they capture so degrading and cruel, that they approach the pornographic. How can we responsibly approach them? Is it more respectful to witness such suffering, or to look away? I explore the notion of bearing witness to animal suffering as a manifestation of respect. I begin by asking why it is important to bear witness to human atrocities (...)
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  10. Bearing Witness to the Truth.Harold Cooke Phillips - 1949
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  11.  17
    Bearing witness in nursing practice: More than a moral obligation?Mikelle Djkowich, Christine Ceci & Olga Petrovskaya - 2019 - Nursing Philosophy 20 (1):e12232.
    In this paper, we explore the concept of bearing witness in nursing practice. We examine the description of bearing witness in the nursing literature, particularly that offered by William Cody who suggests that bearing witness results in the limited moral obligation of “true presence.” We then turn to Lorraine Code's work on testimony, drawing parallels between the concepts of testimony and bearing witness. Code suggests that receiving testimony results in a responsibility to (...)
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  12.  33
    Bearing witness to traumatic memory: An ethical approach to Ken liu’s speculative fiction “the man who ended history – a documentary”.Meng Xia - 2022 - Angelaki 27 (2):100-113.
    This article looks at the problematic witnessing envisioned in Chinese American writer Ken Liu’s speculative fiction “The Man Who Ended History – A Documentary,” in which the back-to-the-past virtu...
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  13. Bearing Witness to the Fusion of Person and Role in Teaching.David T. Hansen - 2018 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 52 (4):21.
    It is a truism that the person in the role of teacher matters. Students learn this truth very early in school. Teachers’ testimonials underscore its reality. School administrators relearn it every time they think about collegiality. These commonplaces attest to the truth that it is persons, not roles as such, who educate, or who fail to do so, as the case may be. It takes a human being to bring to life the many-sided nature of the role.As obvious as these (...)
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  14.  54
    Among School Teachers: Bearing Witness as an Orientation in Educational Inquiry.David T. Hansen - 2017 - Educational Theory 67 (1):9-30.
    In this writing, David Hansen illuminates the aesthetic, moral, and epistemic meaning of bearing witness to teaching and teachers by drawing upon a recently completed field-based endeavor that included extensive school visits. Hansen shows how bearing witness can bring the inquirer close to the truth of teaching. However, the witness must undertake ethical work to ready her- or himself for the task. Even such readiness, which must be continuously re-won on each occasion, guarantees nothing. The (...)
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  15.  79
    Bearing Witness to the Ethics and Politics of Suffering: J. M. Coetzee’s Disgrace, Inconsolable Mourning, and the Task of Educators.Michalinos Zembylas - 2009 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 28 (3):223-237.
    How can educators and their students interrogate the ethics and politics of suffering in ways that do not create fixed and totalized narratives from the past? In responding to this question, this essay draws on J. M. Coeetze’s Disgrace, and discusses how this novel constitutes a crucial site for bearing witness to the suffering engendered by apartheid through inventing new forms of mourning and community. The anti-historicist stance of the novel is grounded on the notion that bearing (...)
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  16.  28
    Testimony Bearing Witness: Epistemology, Ethics, History and Culture.Sybille Krämer & Sigrid Weigel (eds.) - 2017 - New York: Rowman & Littlefield International.
    Testimony/Bearing Witness establishes a dialogue between the different approaches to testimony in epistemology, historiography, law, art, media studies and psychiatry.
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  17.  33
    Bearing Witness to Suffering – A Reflection on the Personal Impact of Conducting Research with Children and Grandchildren of Victims of Apartheid-era Gross Human Rights Violations in South Africa.Cyril K. Adonis - 2020 - Social Epistemology 34 (1):64-78.
    Social scientists who conduct qualitative research frequently use emotional engagement to gather information about participants’ thoughts, feelings, and behaviours in relation to a particularly research question. When the subject under investigation is related to trauma, listening to, or being exposed to personal accounts of participants’ traumatic experiences can carry a significant emotional cost for researchers. This may place them at risk of secondary trauma. In this article, I examine these issues from the context of my doctoral field research in South (...)
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  18.  19
    Bearing witness: A moral way of engaging in the nurse–person relationship.Rahel Naef Rn Bscn Mn - 2006 - Nursing Philosophy 7 (3):146–156.
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  19.  37
    Bearing witness, animal rights and the slaughterhouse vigil.Steve Cooke - forthcoming - European Journal of Political Theory.
    Animal activists sometimes engage in vigils and acts of witnessing as forms of political protest. For example, the Animal Save Movement, a global activist network, regards witnessing the suffering of non-human animals as a moral duty of veganism. The act of witnessing is intended to non-violently communicate both attitudes and principles. These forms of activism are unlike other forms of protest, relying for much of their force upon passive, non-confrontational actions. This article explores the ethical character of vigils and witnessing (...)
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  20.  22
    Bearing Witness to a Knowledge of Encounter in Babette's Feast.Rebecca Sullivan - 2020 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 54 (1):69-89.
    Who is it that can tell me who I am?The often-complex interplay between self and others characterizes educational undertakings. Considerations of how we gain knowledge involve, at least implicitly, an understanding of the relationship between self, others, and the material environment in which learning occurs. The Academy-Award-winning 1987 film Babette’s Feast, based on the 1950 short story by Isak Dine-sen, while not formally a story of education, presents through its protagonist a pedagogy that highlights learning through encounter as complementary and (...)
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  21.  17
    Bearing Witness, Moral Responsibility and Distant Suffering.David W. Hill - 2019 - Theory, Culture and Society 36 (1):27-45.
    Media analyses of the aesthetic presentation of news frequently and persuasively demonstrate the skewed ethics of news production, where those in need who are distant and dissimilar are often presented in ways that do not fully humanize their condition. However, it is argued here, they also locate too fully the locus of moral responsibility in the production and presentation of the media text. This article explores the moral demands inherent in two kinds of media presentation: the explicit focus on shock (...)
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  22.  77
    Bearing witness.Duncan Pritchard - 2005 - The Philosophers' Magazine 32 (32):80-82.
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  23. Bearing Witness: What Can Archaeology Contribute in an Indian Residential School Context?Alison Wylie, Eric Simons & Andrew Martindale - 2020 - In Chelsea H. Meloche, Katherine L. Nichols & Laure Spake (eds.), Working with and for Ancestors: Collaboration in the Care and Study of Ancestral Remains. Routledge. pp. 21-31.
    We explore our role as researchers and witnesses in the context of an emerging partnership with the Penelakut Tribe, the aim of which is to locate the unmarked graves of children who died while attending the notorious Kuper Island Indian Residential School on their territory (southwest British Columbia). This relationship is in the process of taking shape, so we focus on understanding conditions for developing trust, and the interactional expertise necessary to work well together, with a good heart. We suggest (...)
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  24.  58
    Bearing Witness.Eftichis Pirovolakis - 2009 - Philosophy Today 53 (4):377-385.
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  25.  14
    From the Experience to Bearing Witness; From the Authority to Trust. Testimony, Historical Truth and Trust in Contemporary Collective Memory.Maria Pleskaczyńska - 2019 - Philosophical Discourses 1:81-93.
    The last decades are the time of significant interest in the problem of witnesses and their testimonies, both in interdisciplinary discourse and practical activities and institutions. An important philosophical category of testimony, is gaining growing practical importance. New forms of collection and distribution of testimonies, significant increase of their quantity and release to the public discussion and a group of witnesses new participants, creates some new problems requiring reflection. The growing problem of institutionalization may disrupt the natural availability of (...) witness. Connecting testimonies with the historical truth and factual knowledge may lead to devaluation of testimonies and bearing witness. Ethics admits witnesses specific authority based on the personal experience and validity of the moral evaluations; this authority may explain who can (should) to bear witness. Meanwhile, the category of trust seems to explain the witnesses selection much better. The risk of numerous manipulations of testimonies is an important problem that has a negative impact on the reception of the social reception of testimonies and the situation of witnesses. In order to adequately respond to the experiences and needs of witnesses, an atmosphere of social trust should be build. (shrink)
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  26.  46
    Terrorism, trauma, tolerance: Bearing witness to white supremacist attack on Muslims in Christchurch, New Zealand.Tina Besley & Michael A. Peters - 2020 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 52 (2):109-119.
    Kia kaha Aotearoa, be strong New ZealandTo bear witness to the aftermath of a terrorist atrocity as a national outpouring of grief and a memorialising of those who have passed away is a very touchi...
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  27.  17
    Bearing Witness: Religious Meanings in Bioethics by Courtney Campbell, Eugene, OR: Cascade Books, 2019.Nathan Carlin - 2020 - Journal of Medical Humanities 42 (2):289-294.
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  28. Bearing witness: representing women's experiences of prenatal diagnosis'.B. Katz-Rothman - 1996 - In Sue Wilkinson & Celia Kitzinger (eds.), Representing the other: a Feminism & psychology reader. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Sage Publications.
     
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  29.  25
    Intersecting Memories: Bearing Witness to the 1989 Massacre of Women in Montreal.Sharon Rosenberg - 1996 - Hypatia 11 (4):119 - 129.
    In this essay, I write memory across the public-private divide as a commemorative response to the Massacre of Women at École Polytechnique. Through five layers of remembering, I explore the creation of an analytic space that simultaneously considers traumatized subjectivity, bearing witness, and feminist pedagogy.
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  30.  82
    Bearing Witness to Epiphany. [REVIEW]Ann V. Murphy - 2009 - The Owl of Minerva 41 (1-2):143-149.
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  31.  26
    Mourning and Metonymy: Bearing Witness Between Women and Generations.Sara Murphy - 2004 - Hypatia 19 (4):144-168.
    Drucilla Cornell's Legacies of Dignity: Between Women and Generations proposes a feminist ethics of self-representation that asks what exclusions are necessary to autobiography's constructions of identity. Focusing on the ways in which alterity, particularly linked with figures of the mother, are silenced, it advances a mourning that is transformational. I question Cornell's use of a Kantian concept of dignity and suggest that Irigaray's engagement with Levinas offers another way of conceptualizing the problematic.
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  32.  58
    Bearing witness to cultural difference, with apology to Levinas.Rosalyn Diprose - 2001 - Angelaki 6 (2):125 – 135.
  33. Mourning and Metonymy: Bearing Witness Between Women and Generations.Sara Murphy - 2004 - Hypatia 19 (4):142-166.
    Drucilla Cornell's Legacies of Dignity: Between Women and Generations proposes a feminist ethics of self-representation that asks what exclusions are necessary to autobiography's constructions of identity. Focusing on the ways in which alterity, particularly linked with figures of the mother, are silenced, it advances a mourning that is transformational. I question Cornell's use of a Kantian concept of dignity and suggest that Irigaray's engagement with Levinas offers another way of conceptualizing the problematic.
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  34.  11
    Creative Energy: Bearing Witness for the Earth.Thomas Berry & Thomas Mary Berry - 1996 - Random House (NY).
    This lovely volume adapts Thomas Berry's profoundly important and popular The Dream of the Earth to convey anew his concerns and hopes for the planet. Berry pleads for a future rescued from ecological disaster by new "biocratic" priorities based foremost on the needs of the planet. "Defines problems... with eloquence".--Publishers Weekly.
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  35.  28
    The Cost of Bearing Witness to the Environmental Crisis: Vicarious Traumatization and Dealing with Secondary Traumatic Stress among Environmental Researchers.Panu Pihkala - 2020 - Social Epistemology 34 (1):86-100.
    1. The whole idea that environmental issues1 can be traumatizing may appear as a remote possibility to many. While research on this topic is still sporadic, there is a growing international interes...
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  36.  16
    Lives rendered invisible: Bearing witness to human suffering.Mladjo Ivanovic - 2016 - Etikk I Praksis - Nordic Journal of Applied Ethics 2:59-74.
    This paper explores the ethical challenges involved in the ways public representation structures our experiences of atrocities and facilitates an adequate awareness of and response towards the suffering of others. It points out that such an analysis should not exhaust itself in answering what makes public representations of human suffering ethically suspicious and intolerable, but should rather extend this task by clarifying how the public forms sentiments about their social and political reality by elucidating under which conditions public representation promotes (...)
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  37.  22
    Agamben, Arendt and human rights: Bearing witness to the human.Saul Newman & John Lechte - 2012 - European Journal of Social Theory 15 (4):522-536.
    The key theme in this essay is the rethinking of the human, as inspired by the work of Giorgio Agamben and Hannah Arendt. The human here is not a model or concept to be realised, just as community to which the human is linked is not an ideal, but a ‘community to come’. This is revealed only by paying close attention to modes of bearing witness to the human, as instanced, for example, by Agamben’s text, Remnants of Auschwitz. (...)
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  38.  22
    Expressing the Inexpressible in Lyotard and Pseudo-Dionysius: Bearing Witness as Spiritual Exercise.Mélanie Victoria Walton - 2013 - Lanham: Lexington Books.
    Rigorously studying the inexpressible expression provoked by the silenced testimony of the Holocaust survivor, in Jean-François Lyotard's The Differend, and the religious faithful, in Pseudo-Dionysius' The Divine Names, proves to dissolve the apparent heterogeneity of postmodernism and Neoplatonist Christian mysticism and open radical new lines of dialogue. Expressing the Inexpressible critically evaluates each thinker and tradition, rethinks witnessing, testimony, sublimity, and apophaticism, and then engages them together to forge a new reading of silence and eros.
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  39.  44
    Gloria Anzaldúa's Decolonizing Aesthetics: On Silence and Bearing Witness.Martina Ferrari - 2020 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 34 (3):323-338.
    And what if we also learn to listen for silence?This article is one in a series of attempts on my part to think the inbetween of traditionally juxtaposed claims of voice versus silence. It takes seriously both claims that voice is lived as liberatory by many, on the one hand, and that words may be inadequate to bear witness to the humiliation, pain, and systematic degradation of trauma and violence, on the other. Thus situated, I turn to silence to (...)
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  40.  42
    Mélanie V. Walton: Expressing the inexpressible in Lyotard and Pseudo-Dionysius: bearing witness as spiritual exercise: Lexington Books, Lanham, 2013, 326 pp., $100.Timothy D. Knepper - 2015 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 77 (2):191-194.
    All too often, the study of ineffability only looks on the bright side of life—mystical experiences of blissful unity, primordial grounds of overflowing fecundity, noetic truths of existential profundity. To some extent, this is true too for Mélanie V. Walton’s Expressing the Inexpressible in Lyotard and Pseudo-Dionysius: Bearing Witness as Spiritual Exercise, which turns to a “desperate love letter to God” —the eros-infused naming and unnaming of God in The Divine Names, a treatise by the sixth-century Neoplatonic-Christian Pseudo-Dionysius (...)
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  41.  64
    Elated citizenry: Deception and the democratic task of bearing witness.Peg Birmingham - 2008 - Research in Phenomenology 38 (2):198-215.
    It has become nearly a truism for contemporary theorists of democracy to understand the democratic space as agonistic and contested. The shadow that haunts thinkers of democracy today, and out of which this assumption emerges, is the specter of totalitarianism with its claims to a totalizing knowledge in the form of ideology and a totalizing power of a sovereign will that claims to be the embodiment of the law. Caught up in these totalizing claims, the citizenry becomes elated. The only (...)
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  42.  6
    On the Moral Registers of Bearing Witness.David T. Hansen - 2018 - Philosophy of Education 74:223-228.
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  43.  13
    Survivors and the Will to Bear Witness.Terrence Des Pres - 1973 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 40.
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  44.  65
    The Time of Affect, or Bearing Witness to Life.Mark Hansen - 2004 - Critical Inquiry 30 (3):584.
  45. A message in a bottle: Bearing witness as a mode of ethical practice.F. Kurasawa - 2003 - Filosoficky Casopis 51 (6):969-991.
    In response to distant suffering, global civil society is being consumed by a generalized witnessing fever that converts public spaces into veritable machines for the production of testimonial discourses and evidence. However, bearing witness itself has tended to be treated as an exercise in truth-telling, a juridical outcome, a psychic phenomenon or a moral prescription. By contrast, this article conceives of bearing witness as a transnational mode of ethico-political labour, an arduous working-through produced out of the (...)
     
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  46.  16
    Book Review: Bearing Witness: Intersectional Perspectives on Trauma Theology by Karen O’Donnell and Katie Cross (eds.). [REVIEW]Maria Power - 2024 - Studies in Christian Ethics 37 (1):173-176.
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  47.  11
    Telling Life Together: A Feminist Theological Reflection on Bearing Witness.Lucy Tatman - 1997 - Feminist Theology 6 (16):86-99.
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  48. Redeeming Transcendence in the Arts: Bearing Witness to the Triune God.[author unknown] - 2018
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  49.  10
    Thomas A. Kerns and Kathleen Dean Moore (eds), Bearing Witness: The Human Rights Case Against Fracking and Climate Change.David G. Henderson - 2023 - Environmental Values 32 (4):507-509.
  50.  33
    James Dawes, That the World May Know: Bearing Witness to Atrocity: Harvard University Press, 2007. [REVIEW]J. Paul Martin - 2008 - Human Rights Review 9 (4):559-560.
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