In a Hyperallergic interview with Jackson from last year, Risa Puleo wrote, «While studying... at Yale University, Tomashi Jackson noticed that the language Josef Albers used to describe color perception phenomenon, in his 1963 instructional text Interaction of Color, mirrored the language of
racialized segregation.»
Tomashi Jackson found that the language Josef Albers used to describe color perception mirrored the language of
racialized segregation.
While studying painting and printmaking at Yale University, Tomashi Jackson noticed that the language Josef Albers used to describe color perception phenomenon, in his 1963 instructional text Interaction of Color, mirrored the language of
racialized segregation found in the transcripts of education policy and civil rights court cases fought by Thurgood Marshall and the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund (LDF).
Not exact matches
Housing
segregation in the United States has a disturbing history of continued oppression of minority groups, specifically African Americans, by maintaining
racialized patterns of housing throughout the nation.
Private Action with «Neutral» Intent The fourth area impacting residential
segregation, and the one proving hardest to combat, is the exacerbation of spatial inequality by the choices of private citizens that are not motivated by race, but by other factors that are often correlated with race; these factors have
racialized consequences when acted upon.