Johnson's first book,
Appropriating Blackness: Performance and the Politics of Authenticity, examines how blackness is appropriated and performed within and outside African American culture. It won the Lilla A. Heston Award and the Errol Hill Award. His second book,
Sweet Tea: Black Gay Men of the South—An Oral History (2008), is an ethnographic oral history of the lives of black gay men in the US South, a traditionally uninterrogated region. This book received the
Stonewall Book Award from the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Round Table of the
American Library Association. Published in 2005 with Mae G. Henderson,
Black Queer Studies: A Critical Anthology interrogates the experiences of black queer people whose subjectivities, beliefs, struggles, triumphs and desires had not previously been interrogated by either queer theory or Black studies. The anthology includes writings from scholars including
Cathy Cohen,
Kara Keeling,
Roderick Ferguson,
Rinaldo Walcott, and
Dwight McBride. Published in 2014 with Ramon H. Rivera-Servera,
solo/black/woman: scripts, interviews and essays is a collection of writings that feature seven solo performances by emerging and established feminist performance artists from the past three decades. The book received an honorable mention for the Errol Hill Book Award. In 2013, Johnson published
Cultural Struggles: Performance, Ethnography, Praxis, an edited collection of essays written by
Dwight Conquergood, who selected Johnson to publish his work before his death in 2004. Conquergood was an ethnographer in the field of performance studies whose ethnographic methods focused on power, privilege, and researcher reflexivity/responsibility. Published in 2016,
No Tea, No Shade: New Writings in Black Queer Studies features the next generation of black queer theorists who follow in the lineage of writings in
Black Queer Studies: A Critical Anthology. The text was a finalist for the Lambda Literary Award and features pieces by
Amber Jamilla Musser, Omise'eke Natasha Tinsley, Jafari Sinclaire Allen, Lyndon Gill and
Marlon M. Bailey. Published in 2016,
Blacktino Queer Performance (with Ramon H. Rivera-Servera) is a collection of nine performance scripts by established and emerging black and Latina/o queer playwrights and performance artists. Each script is accompanied by an interview and critical essay by scholars across a range of interdisciplinary fields. Published in 2018,
Black. Queer. Southern. Women—An Oral History examines the experiences of black women who love other women and live in the American South. In this text, Johnson employed similar methods (ethnographic oral history) as he did in
Sweet Tea. ==Creative scholarship==