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About MARIAL
MARIAL in the News
Money Changes Everything
Commerce, philanthropy, and the culture of the academy
Academic Exchange
An Online Place for Scholarly Conversation at Emory
December 2002/January 2003
If I'm going to accept [the Sloan Foundation's]
money in good faith, I have to minimally carry out their agenda.
--Bradd Shore, Professor of Anthropology
Bradd Shore directs the Center for Myth and Ritual in American
Life (MARIAL), supported by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation's Program
on Dual-Career Working Middle Class Families. The MARIAL Center
researches the functions and significance of ritual and myth in
dual wage-earner middle class families in the American South.
Academic Exchange (AE): How did your relationship with the Sloan
Foundation first develop?
Bradd Shore (BS): I got to know Sloan because they came to me.
The program director called out of the blue and explained what they
were interested in, and I said, "That's interesting, but I
do ritual and myth and psychological anthropology in the South Pacific."
But she told me they wanted to set up a research center in a major
southern university, and the topic they were interested in was ritual
and myth in American family life. Most people who worked in American
family sociology or anthropology didn't really know how to think
about ritual and myth in an interesting way, so they decided to
take a gamble and go to somebody who had worked in ritual and myth
and have them reorient their work toward American families. I began
to think how interesting this could be, so I wrote a grant proposal,
and it was accepted..
AE: So the Sloan Foundation's agenda became your agenda?
BS: Actually, that's been the biggest area of negotiation we've
had. The issue is always what they call "staying on track."
They had a vision of what they wanted-who these families were and
what the problems were-and they're very policy-oriented. Anthropologists
are often not policy-oriented. That's been an interesting tension.
I have to understand what their agenda is, and they have the responsibility
to make it very clear to me at the beginning. And then if I'm going
to accept their money in good faith, I have to minimally carry out
their agenda. I think we've moved closer to the work-life issues
they're interested in, and they have given us breathing room to
explore some areas where the direct connection with policy for working
families may not be obvious.
There's an intrinsic tension between the open-ended research mind
of the anthropologist who goes in not sure what they're going to
find and wanting to go where the really interesting threads lead
them, and the policy-driven research, which presumes that we already
know; it just wants to collect data to support policy.
AE: How are you managing that tension?
BS: It's a tightrope walk in which I am held responsible for making
sure that the research we fund has a serious component that foregrounds
the issues of work and home. The Sloan Foundation wants reviews,
to see what you're publishing, and periodically they'll come and
have everyone talk about their research. It took me about a year
and a half to get the research on track. It's the least pleasant
part of my job. I had to recruit faculty whose work was already
fully developed in a certain area, and I had to promise them funding
and support if they would move their research slightly in one direction.
The research had to be close, but very little of it was on target
because issues of myth and ritual and routine in American middle-class
working families are not normal research subjects. So for example,
two of our researchers are studying family conversational patterns
and storytelling, and they were interested in that for a long time,
so that's not a problem. But we've had to get them to make sure
their sample had a certain percentage of working families versus
non-working families, where there was a stay-at-home parent, and
they were going to compare the styles. They were not going to originally
do that.
AE: Have you ever had to cut someone's funding off?
BS: Yes, we have. You begin to get research that goes into areas
that are too far off. Scholars don't like to be told what to research;
we can't breathe if we're too tightly constrained. And we're primarily
scholars. We're not servants of public policy. In most cases, we've
been able to compromise. The research may go into areas that go
beyond Sloan's interests, but they know that. As long as we can
focus on areas that are of potential use to them, we can do other
stuff as well.
AE: Do you think philanthropy is becoming more like investment and
demanding a return?
BS: I think it always was; I just think it didn't want to acknowledge
it. These are business models they're applying. And there's no question
about it; Sloan is the same way. But they have been very open and
direct with us. They do not pretend they're just funding pure research.
They are very big on influencing policy. They work with the labor
department to get childcare laws changed. The trouble with anthropologists
is they come up with insights that you couldn't have predicted and
that may actually go contrary to the policy goals
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