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00:00:00 - Introductions

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Partial Transcript: Laura Keith: Okay. My name is Laura Keith and this is October 23rd 2014, and we are in Wallace Hall and I also have Sara Evenson here with me interviewing. Would you like to introduce yourself?

Katherine Allen: My name is Katherine Allen, and I am a professor of Human Development at Virginia Tech.

00:00:35 - Upbringing

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Partial Transcript: ALLEN: Growing up? Ok, I was born in Baltimore, Maryland on March 9th, 1954. I grew up in a row house with a big alley in the back, so tons of children. I’m a member of the baby boom generation. I have an older sister and three younger brothers, but all five of us were born within an eight year span so I like to call us littermates. And we’re still all very close, but our parents are gone. And so, what else? I’m very tight with my siblings.

00:01:29 - Undergrad and Early Activism

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Partial Transcript: And I finished my degree in this field (Human Development and Family Studies) at University of Connecticut, and I was an activist there and I actually attended one of the very first Women’s Studies classes in San Diego. And then, when I was at University of Connecticut I was active in the Women’s Center and we used to wear these buttons that said “Together, Women Together” and most of us at that time were still very involved with men and so, we used to call ourselves ‘political lesbians.’

00:04:38 - Sexuality

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Partial Transcript: KEITH: why don’t we talk a little bit about maybe some of your earliest experiences figuring out your sexuality, maybe when you were coming out?

ALLEN: Yeah. Well, when I was in-- they didn’t have a name for bisexuality, you know? But when I was in college, I had a boyfriend and I had a girlfriend [laughter].

00:06:37 - Coming to Virginia Tech

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Partial Transcript: So my ex-husband, my child, my new partner, who was a woman, and I came here in 1989. And when I got here, there were no out women. I think there was one out woman, I mean, one woman who identified as lesbian, I think she identifies as bisexual, but she was not out.

And so I came here, just always having been an activist and very outspoken and attention-grabbing. So I came here out and proud and-- I think there was a gay man who was in a heterosexual relationship. But there were very few, if any, out people. And this was in 1989, and then the '90s was a time of great activism.

00:08:14 - Lesbian Mothers Group and the 'Lesbian Poster Family'

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Partial Transcript: My former partner and I started the Lesbian Mothers Group and we were very active in the lesbian community and we were giving talks all over the place. [laughter] I was in Time magazine, I was on Talk of the Nation. So there was you know, this was a time when there weren’t very many out academics. And I made a lot of noise, I would say now, about the personal and professional integration.

Keywords: Family

00:10:23 - Struggles for Family Benefits

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Partial Transcript: we had our son-- our second child-- who was born in 1994 and… I was a University professor, and she was a teacher outside. She could not be on my health insurance, my biological child could be, but my other child could not be. There was no such thing as, you couldn’t have second parent adoption. Obviously couldn’t get married, that was just anathema.

Keywords: Health Insurance

00:12:11 - Lesbian Poster Family Ripped in Half

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Partial Transcript: And then our lives changed when she left me for another woman here. And, she took our-- her biological child, and so the lesbian poster family just got ripped in half.

00:13:36 - Ambiguous Loss in LGBT Families

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Partial Transcript: I eventually wrote a paper about ambiguous loss in LGBT families. I did write about it, and it was about the lack of legal marriage and legal custody for children, having children not having a legal chaperone through the divorce process.

Keywords: Child Custody Rights, Divorce

00:14:21 - Change in the Laws on Gay Marriage and Benefits

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Partial Transcript: it’s so wonderful that we have these laws that have changed and people can get married. I hope it sticks! And I know the university has changed it so that you can have non-legal dependents on your health insurance. That was the big fight that we were going for. That was something to rally around.

00:16:54 - Research on Children of LGBT Parents

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Partial Transcript: I have always been an activist and always conducted research. Now I’m doing research on children who were born to lesbian, gay, and bisexual parents and are now adults. And so what are their lives like?

Keywords: LGBTQ Families, Divorce, Separation, Child Custody Rights

00:18:06 - Identity

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Partial Transcript: KEITH: So, if you had to identify yourself now, how would you identify yourself?

ALLEN: Well, like I said, I would identify myself as lesbian, except I’m married to a man and I think that’s disrespectful to him. But my politics, my heart, my lifestyle, is a lesbian lifestyle. I’m from the '60s and the '70s, that was the birth of lesbian feminism. That is me.

Keywords: Feminist, Marriage, Family

00:19:49 - Community

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Partial Transcript: KEITH: what communities, then, do you identify with?

ALLEN: Well the sad thing about what happened to me in this town is that because there was a divorce between my partner-- it wasn’t legal, but there was an emotional divorce. And we separated our homes. The lesbian community is small and it’s hard to stay in that community…and it’s hard for friends “Who do we pick? Who do we side with?”

00:23:50 - LGBTQ Life at Virginia Tech

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Partial Transcript: KEITH: What has been your experience of LGBTQ life at Virginia Tech?

ALLEN: Well, I think that the administration has always been well-meaning , but, it took years to get the Principles of Community through. We’ve always had racial problems issues at this university, this history of race relations, and racism has always been strong, and then we were a male military academy. And we still have far more male undergraduates than female undergraduates. So we are very atypical from other, most other universities now have more females.

00:25:10 - Campaign for Spousal Hire of Shelli Fowler

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Partial Transcript: They have a very interesting situation where they came, she (Dean DePauw), came as the Graduate Dean and then Shelli was her partner and the administration at that time was… the Board of Visitors, there was a very vocal person that would not allow Shelli to accept a spousal hire. So many of us -- this was in the 2000s-- and I was part of the activist group, we wrote this huge letter for the Chronicle of Higher Education and we gathered thousands of dollars for that. So we had a campaign on campus for that, to do that, to publicly humiliate Virginia Tech.

00:25:55 - Current Climate

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Partial Transcript: But right now, the climate’s good, I think. And we’re educated now and they’ve been educated about transgender issues, and I think for anyone who’s been around a long time it’s bittersweet, if I can be really honest about that. Because when you start with almost nothing and you’re piggy backing on the oppression of others…we wouldn’t be where we are if it wasn’t for the Civil Rights movement and if it wasn’t for the Women’s movement, etc. These people who have pioneered it.

Keywords: LGBTQ Rights

00:27:09 - "Too Much Promotion of Lesbianism"

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Partial Transcript: My very first teaching evaluations-- you know students have to write things about you-- my very first class in 1989, and one of the comments was “too much promotion of lesbianism.” I have always held that as a badge of honor. So yeah, so I have been doing this for a long time.