Kimberly Robertson

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She / Her / Hers

Kimberly Robertson is a citizen of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation and an artivist, scholar, teacher, and mother who works diligently to employ Native feminist theories, practices, and methodologies in her hustle to fulfill the dreams of her ancestors and to build a world in which her daughters can thrive. Robertson is an Indigenous anti-violence advocate who has received trainings and certifications from Sacred Circle, the former National Resource Center to End Violence Against Native Women as well as the current National Indigenous Women’s Resource Center. Robertson is also an active member of the Los Angeles Indian community and is currently the co-creative director for Meztli Projects’ Ready to Rise Initiative.

Robertson earned an MA in American Indian Studies and a PhD in Women’s Studies from the University of California, Los Angeles in 2012. She is currently an Associate Professor of Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at California State University, Los Angeles. Her scholarship and creative practices: center Native feminisms, the ideas and practices of ceremony, storytelling, intersecting subjectivities, dislocation, decolonization, and Indigenous futurities; focus on Indigenous resistance to sexual and gendered violence; and include screen-printing, collage, beadwork, installation art, and zine-making.

kimberlydawnrobertson.com
IG: @kdrslaysthepatriarchy

For more info contact info@thechapterhouse.org