Content deleted Content added
Betacommand (talk | contribs) m fix refs |
|||
Line 1:
'''Compadrazgo''' is a form of [[fictive kinship]] found in [[Latin American culture]], meaning literally ''co-parents'' but referring to co-[[godparent]]hood or joint [[sponsorship]] of a [[godchild]] or ritual object.<ref>"Counting on Kin: Social Networks, Social Support, and Child Health Status." Shawn Malia Kana'iaupuni,
== References ==
Alum, R., 1977, "El Parentesco Ritual en un Batey Dominicano [Ritual Kinship in a Dominican Batey]," Revista Eme-Eme. Santiago de los Caballeros, Dominican Republic: Universidad Católica Madre y Maestra; V (26): 11-36. ▼
<references/>
Berruecos, L., 1976, El Compadrazgo en América Latina; Análisis Antropológico de 106 Casos. México: Instituto Indigenista Interamericano.▼
▲Alum, R., 1977, "El Parentesco Ritual en un Batey Dominicano [Ritual Kinship in a Dominican Batey],"
▲Berruecos, L., 1976,
Foster, G., 1953, “Cofradia and compadrazgo in Spain and Spanish America,” Southwestern Journal of Anthropology; 9:1-28.
Gudeman, S.; &
Nutini, Hugo, and Betty Bell, 1980, Ritual Kinship: The Structure of the Compadrazgo System in Rural Tlaxcala. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Line 14 ⟶ 16:
Nutini, Hugo, 1984, Ritual Kinship: Ideological and Structural Integration of the Compadrazgo System in Rural Tlaxcala. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Ossio, J., 1984, Cultural Continuity, Structure, and Context; Some Peculiarities of the Andean Compadrazgo; IN: R. T. Smith, ed.; Kinship Ideology and Practice in Latin America.
== External links ==
|