Haitian Vodou McCarthy Brown had intermittently conducted research in
Haiti since 1973. She also studied the
Haitian Vodou community in
Brooklyn,
New York since 1978. As part of her conversion, she "married" the spirit
Ogoun Badagris, a spirit who embodies
assertiveness, in a ceremony performed by
Mama Lola. They were introduced in the summer of 1978 by a mutual friend, Theodore B. At the time, McCarthy Brown was working on an
ethnography of the Brooklyn Haitian community for the
Brooklyn Museum. Karen McCarthy Brown's
participant observer-informant relationship with Mama Lola gradually progressed into a strong friendship. McCarthy Brown is fascinated with relationships regarding "The
Other," and recognizes herself as such within Vodou communities. Brown described this relationship eloquently: "When the lines long drawn in anthropology between
participant-observer and informant break down, the only truth is the one in between; and
anthropology becomes something closer to a social art form, open to both aesthetic and moral judgment. This situation is riskier, but it does bring intellectual labor and life into closer relation."
Mama Lola: A Vodou Priestess in Brooklyn, a
biography of Marie Thérèse Alourdes Macena Champagne Lovinski, is arguably McCarthy Brown's most important contribution to the field of anthropology. Through it, she brought attention to the widespread practice and validity of the
Vodou religion, helping to begin to break down ignorant negative associations with Vodou. The book explores and renders moot dichotomies of urban vs. rural, academic vs. illiterate, and developed vs. underdeveloped that unsuccessfully seek to oversimplify encounters between the
West and "The
Other." McCarthy Brown won the 1992
Victor Turner Prize in
Ethnographic Writing by the
Society for Humanistic Anthropology,
American Anthropological Association, for
Mama Lola: A Vodou Priestess in Brooklyn. The book was also awarded as the 1991 Best First Book in the History of Religion by the
American Academy of Religion.
Other research McCarthy Brown has written about the political murals that were created in Haiti in response to
Jean-Bertrand Aristide's return in 1994. She has also conducted research in the
People's Republic of Benin. ==Feminism==