茄子视频

Skip to main content

Calvin News

Faculty Profile: Elisha Marr

Tue, Jun 25, 2013
Grace Ruiter

When Calvin sociology professor Elisha Marr鈥檚 class told her she ruined movies for them, she counted the course a success.

The interim, Calvin鈥檚 January term, saw students travel to Hollywood for an in-depth study of media. Marr鈥檚 goal in teaching it was that they would come back to Grand Rapids more aware of stereotyping in popular culture. If achieving that goal meant ruining a few movies, Marr thought it was a price worth paying.

A powerful tool

As an intersectional sociologist, Marr studies class, race and gender. Her work often focuses on the way the media portrays these subjects because she believes it has a big impact on the way we view them.

That impact can be positive: Shows like 30 Rock and The Colbert Report do a great job tackling race and gender issues, she said.

She also credited the movie Deep Impact and TV show 24 with challenging stereotypes by having black actors play the president, something many believe opened people鈥檚 minds to a black president.

But has found that the media reinforces stereotypes more often that it challenges them: 鈥淧eople like to see familiar things. They pay to see familiar things, so we give that to them. The media gives people what they want to see.鈥 

Reinforcing stereotypes

Marr has seen plenty of examples of the media 鈥済iving people what they want to see鈥 in her research on media coverage of transracial adoption.

She said that while the media portrays adoptive parents as saviors鈥攎oral, pious and generous鈥攊t tells a very different story when it comes to birth parents.

鈥淎ll of our stereotypes about race and class are applied to the birth family, which is usually a family of color,鈥 Marr explained. 鈥淏irth parents are never interviewed since their identities are confidential. We just hear them talked about by agencies and adoptive parents. They are often characterized as dysfunctional, bad with money and promiscuous as a result.鈥

The children they give up for adoption face some of the same stereotypes. Research shows that despite their middle class backgrounds, many transracial adoptees are treated like members of a lower class when they aren鈥檛 with their adoptive families. For Marr, this shows the strong ties between race and class stereotypes.

鈥淣ormally, we think of money as class, but this [treatment of transracial adoptees] shows it鈥檚 more than that,鈥 Marr said.

She believes the ability to recognize these stereotypes in the media is essential to combatting this kind of thinking. But Marr says many stereotypes are so engrained in us we don鈥檛 realize they鈥檙e stereotypes. She often sees this lack of awareness in her students.

Raising awareness

鈥淎 lot of students think racism is over,鈥 Marr said.

 However, she鈥檚 hoping to change that thinking one class at a time.

鈥淥nce you teach [students] how it manifests鈥攚hether it鈥檚 race, gender, or class鈥攖hey鈥檒l see it in action,鈥 Marr explained. 鈥淭he more awareness, the more people are likely to change.鈥

If the response so far is any indication, Marr鈥檚 efforts seem to be working.

鈥淎 lot of the time it鈥檚 after the semester鈥檚 over,鈥 Marr said. 鈥淭hey鈥檒l e-mail me and say, 鈥業 know what you鈥檙e talking about now! Look at this commercial!鈥欌

The mouth of a sociologist

When Marr was a student at Michigan State University (MSU) in Lansing, Mich., sociology and stereotypes weren鈥檛 even on her radar.

She planned to study accounting until a social sciences professor told her she had 鈥渢oo big a mouth to be an accountant.鈥

Marr thought about it and decided the professor was right.

A career aptitude test suggested several career fields for Marr, one of which was sociology. Marr decided to take her sociology core class and see if she liked it. By the end of the class, Marr had a new major.

However, the sociology classes at MSU had hundreds of students in them. Drawn to the small class sizes, Marr transferred to Calvin for her sociology degree. She returned to MSU to get a masters and PhD in sociology.

A job that fits

At first, Marr was ecstatic when she landed a tenure-track job at a big university.  But she soon found herself longing for the liberal arts culture at Calvin.

鈥淓veryone in my classes was grudgingly there,鈥 she remembered. 鈥淭he department wasn鈥檛 really valued. There was no university support even for those who were interested in sociology at [the university].鈥

When a job opened up in , Marr took it. She hasn鈥檛 looked back since.

Yet much as she loves Calvin, Marr admits there is one job that might tempt her to leave: 鈥淚 would love to be an international spa critic. Traveling the world and trying out spas鈥攖hat鈥檚 my retirement plan.鈥