Eugene Lesbian Oral History Project
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Work provided by University of Oregon


Oral History Interview with Marilyn Picariello and Kathryn Hunt: Video, Eugene Lesbian Oral History Project


Interviewee
Interviewer
Date
  • 2018-08-30
Description
  • The Eugene Lesbian Oral History Project collection consists of interviews of 83 people for the Eugene Lesbian Oral History Project, conducted by Professor Judith Raiskin and Curator Linda Long at the University of Oregon starting in the summer of 2018.
Abstract
  • Devi was born in Anchorage, Alaska in 1950. She lived in Seattle in the early 1970s where there were feminist presses. When she moved to Eugene she founded Mother Kali’s Books in 1976 with Marilyn Picariello, Ellen Greenlaw, and Barbara Bryant, with help from S. Reddick. This feminist bookstore became a fixture in Eugene for 33 years and a gathering place for the lesbian/queer community. She and Marilyn describe the late seventies in Eugene as a time marked by a flowering of a community of women artists, dancers, poets, musicians, photographers, publishers, and small business owners who supported and influenced each other. Like Mother Kali’s, many community organizations and businesses were operated as collectives and cooperatives. Devi returned to Seattle in 1984, where she co-founded two collective bookstores, It’s About Time, and Red and Black Books. She has lived with her husband since 1993 and discusses bisexuality and the experience and consequences of being in a heterosexual relationship after being with women and the mixed responses of friends, gay and straight. Marilyn: Marilyn was born in 1951 into an Italian-American family in Brooklyn. Her family was working class, with the extended family all in one apartment complex. She talks about her childhood memories. Marilyn went to parochial schools. She remembers her family as matriarchal and loving. All of Marilyn's boyfriends in high school were gay. Her family expected her to get married and have children. At age seventeen, she knew she was a lesbian and family life started to seem oppressive. Marilyn came to Eugene in the early 1970s to go to graduate school at UO, where she studied Special Education. The lesbian community was a big distraction for her. She discusses the character of the lesbian community, and the various social and cultural activities available. Many lesbians lived in the Whiteaker and River Road areas. Marilyn met Kathryn “Devi” Hunt and together they started Mother Kali’s Books. The seed money for the bookstore was Ellen Greenlaw’s inheritance of $800. Marilyn and Devi discuss the bookstore. They describe the bookstore, which was located at 11th Avenue and Lawrence Street. Marilyn also did warehouse work at Starflower Natural Foods & Botanicals in 1979. That same year, Marilyn and Devi left Mother Kali’s. In 1980, Marilyn went down to San Francisco where she worked for over ten years with AIDS nonprofits. When she returned to Eugene, she and her partner Linda started Eugene Insight Meditation Community. This involved a Twelve-Step Program and the Dharma. Marilyn and Devi end their interview by discussing aging in the community.
Subject
Keyword
  • Non-monogamy
  • United States. Federal Bureau of Investigation.
  • Lesbian community – Oregon
  • Amazon Kung Fu
  • Mother Kali’s Books
  • Drug abuse
  • Community Center for the Performing Arts (WOW Hall)
  • American Indian Movement
  • Wallflower Order Dance Collective
  • Marriage equality
  • Riviera Room
  • Special education
  • Hoedads, Inc.
  • Feminist bookstores
Location
Rights
Rights Holder
  • University of Oregon Libraries
Identifier
  • Coll520_do043
Repository
Local Collection Name
Local Collection ID
  • Coll 520
Related URL
Media
Institution
Submission Date
  • 07/02/2024
Modified
  • 07/22/2024
Collections

APA

Eugene Lesbian Oral History Project, University of Oregon. (25 Apr 2025). Oral History Interview with Marilyn Picariello and Kathryn Hunt: Video, Eugene Lesbian Oral History Project Retrieved from https://oregondigital.org/concern/videos/df73c246c

MLA

Eugene Lesbian Oral History Project, University of Oregon. "Oral History Interview with Marilyn Picariello and Kathryn Hunt: Video, Eugene Lesbian Oral History Project" Oregon Digital. 25 Apr 2025. https://oregondigital.org/concern/videos/df73c246c

Chicago

Eugene Lesbian Oral History Project, University of Oregon. "Oral History Interview with Marilyn Picariello and Kathryn Hunt: Video, Eugene Lesbian Oral History Project" Oregon Digital. Accessed 2025-04-25. https://oregondigital.org/concern/videos/df73c246c

Wiki

{{cite web | url= https://oregondigital.org/concern/videos/df73c246c | title= Oral History Interview with Marilyn Picariello and Kathryn Hunt: Video, Eugene Lesbian Oral History Project |author= |accessdate= 2025-04-25 |publisher= }}
Data Sources
Footer Number Term External URI
1 Picariello, Marilyn http://opaquenamespace.org/ns/creator/PicarielloMarilyn
2 Hunt, Kathryn http://opaquenamespace.org/ns/creator/HuntKathryn
3 Raiskin, Judith L. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n95069466
4 Long, Linda, 1956- http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no2001035121
5 Lesbianism http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85076157
6 Lesbian community http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh95005870
7 University of Oregon >> Lane County >> Oregon >> United States https://sws.geonames.org/5758196/
8 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
9 University of Oregon. Libraries. Special Collections and University Archives http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no2003116678
10 Eugene Lesbian Oral History Project http://opaquenamespace.org/ns/localCollectionName/EugeneLesbianOralHistoryProject
11 Video http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/MovingImage
12 University of Oregon http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n80126183

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