Collectivist Relationality and Individualistic Relationality: Pacific Mothers and Fathers Negotiating Agency and Identity in Post–Separation Care Arrangements for Children

Moeata Keil
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Abstract

The degree to which agency and identity are experienced as individualised or relational constructs have been widely debated in the sociological literature. Yet, at the centre of these debates are Western notions and understandings of individualisation and relationality, including in family research. They have relied on individualised and nuclearised understandings and approaches to being a family that more closely approximate the lives of white Western middle-class nuclear families. Drawing on semi-structured talanoa (akin to interviews) with separated heterosexual Pacific parents, specifically ten mothers and five fathers, living in New Zealand, I contribute to individualisation and relationality debates by examining how agency and identity are enacted following separation. In particular, I examine the way that Pacific mothers and fathers grapple with tenets of individualisation and relationality in terms of how and with whom they organise and negotiate care arrangements for children. My research demonstrates how Pacific gendered norms and values operated in ways that differentially shaped the kinds of decisions that mothers and fathers made about children’s care arrangements. I conclude with a discussion that highlights the significance of integrating cultural relationality into research on family life.
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集体主义关系和个人主义关系:太平洋裔母亲和父亲在分居后照顾子女的安排中商讨代理和身份问题
在社会学文献中,关于代理和身份在多大程度上被视为个体化或关系性的建构,一直存在着广泛的争论。然而,这些争论的核心是西方对个体化和关系性的概念和理解,包括在家庭研究中。它们依赖于个人化和核心化的理解,以及更接近西方白人中产阶级核心家庭生活的家庭方式。通过对居住在新西兰的太平洋地区异性恋分居父母,特别是 10 位母亲和 5 位父亲进行半结构化的 talanoa(类似于访谈),我研究了分居后的代理和身份是如何形成的,从而为个性化和关系性辩论做出了贡献。特别是,我研究了太平洋裔母亲和父亲在如何以及与谁一起组织和协商照顾子女的安排时,是如何应对个体化和关系性原则的。我的研究表明,太平洋地区的性别规范和价值观是如何以不同的方式影响着母亲和父亲就子女的照料安排做出的决定。最后,我通过讨论强调了将文化关系性纳入家庭生活研究的意义。
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