Jane

Jane

Louise talks to Jane about her decision to have a baby as a lesbian woman, the limited options available for finding donors and artificial insemination, and parenting and parental rights.
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Collection: 
Date of interview: 
1989
Interviewee: 
Jane
Interviewer: 
Louise Hutchinson
Format: 
Audio
Language: 
English
Place of interview: 
Rights: 
Third-party permission and agreement to CC BY-NC 4.0 license obtained from Vancouver Co-op Radio.
Restrictions: 
None
Dates mentioned: 
Topics: 

Sex and Relationships

Topic: Sex and Relationships

Content includes significant discussion of all matters related to sex, sexuality, and relationships (other than familial relationships with parents or children), including: friendships; marriage; divorce; relationship models, etc.

Family

Topic: Family

Content includes significant discussion of matters related to family, including: one’s relationships with their family members; having and raising children; the experience of having a non-heteronormative/non-traditional family.

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Catherine, Allen, Carolyn, Will, Edie, and Jane

Six people, ages 29-45, talk about how they came to accept their sexuality, and how and why they live in the country. Two of the interviewees describe how societal homophobia, as well as rejection from within the lesbian community, have inspired their art and activism.
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00:00
 
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00:00
 
Collection: 
Date of interview: 
1994 or 1995
Interviewee: 
Catherine
Allen
Carolyn
Will
Edie
Jane
Interviewer: 
Michael Riordon
Format: 
Audio
Language: 
English
Place of interview: 
Dates mentioned: 
Topics: 

Activism and Social Justice

Topic: Activism and Social Justice

Content includes discussion of matters related to activism and social justice, including but not limited to: political and social movements; activist work; community organizing; and protests and demonstrations.

Community

Topic: Community

Content includes significant discussion of: finding and/or being part of a community; community organizing or organizations; community building; or the relationships between communities.

Identity

Topic: Identity

Content includes significant discussion of identity/ies (including gender, sexual, racial, religious, and class) and how one self-identifies, and/or significant discussion of the process of finding or determining one’s identity/ies.

Sex and Relationships

Topic: Sex and Relationships

Content includes significant discussion of all matters related to sex, sexuality, and relationships (other than familial relationships with parents or children), including: friendships; marriage; divorce; relationship models, etc.

Spaces

Topic: Spaces

Content includes significant discussion of physical (and sometimes conceptual) spaces and locales including: urban spaces and life; rural spaces and life; private/domestic spaces; the home; neighbourhoods and ghettos; and semi-private or semi-public spaces such as women’s bookshops, community spaces, and land/living collectives.

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