Block Ellen
J R Anthropol Inst. 2014 Dec 1;20(4):711-727. doi: 10.1111/1467-9655.12131.
HIV/AIDS has devastated families in rural Lesotho, leaving many children orphaned. Families have adapted to the increase in the number of orphans and HIV-positive children in ways that provide children with the best possible care. Though local ideas about kinship and care are firmly rooted in patrilineal social organization, in practice, maternal caregivers, often grandmothers, are increasingly caring for orphaned children. Negotiations between affinal kin capitalize on flexible kinship practices in order to legitimate new patterns of care, which have shifted towards a model that often favours matrilocal practices of care in the context of idealized patrilineality.
艾滋病毒/艾滋病给莱索托农村地区的家庭带来了巨大破坏,致使许多儿童成为孤儿。家庭已通过各种方式来适应孤儿和艾滋病毒呈阳性儿童数量的增加,以便为孩子们提供尽可能最好的照料。尽管当地关于亲属关系和照料的观念深深植根于父系社会组织,但在实际中,往往是祖母等母亲一方的照料者越来越多地照顾孤儿。姻亲之间的协商利用了灵活的亲属关系做法,以使新的照料模式合法化,这种模式在理想化的父系制度背景下已转向通常有利于从母居照料模式。