This sounds interesting. Can you expand a little more on this?


Well, I was one of the alumni  co-ods  in undergrad. We were trying to
prepare a list for some alumni event. In the eighties - someone had
completely messed up the alumni lists - which meant that all we were left
with was a lot of maiden names.

So if I was looking for Shruti Shukla, googling, asking classmates, asking
other people - no one had a clue. (Chances are she moved with her husband to
some place, lost touch with her friends.) Phone numbers change over 15
years, so do addresses.

Post marriage - it's harder for women to keep in touch with their friends -
especially if they have moved cities. This notion of becoming a seamless
unit - means that couples end up going out together. And usually they end up
going out with the man's friends. (Yes, I know things have changed - but for
a lot of people they haven't - at all.). While this intellectual distaste
for Orkut, Facebook and other thingys may find justification somewhere, for
a lot of women this becomes highly exciting - I've found long lost friends -
with half their name defaced - part of the same alumni orkut group -
recognizing them through their photographs.

About the male-dominated institutions - in my second work place - the
bonding was mostly late at night (I simply couldn't go - I lived alone - and
I didn't have a vehicle - and have you seen how safe the streets are after
11? Hell, even my colleagues became unsafe after 11.) They discussed tender
amounts in "the loo".  They forwarded some of the most obscene mails i have
laid eyes on to each other. The thing is - even if I enjoy the humour - I
have to pretend I don't - because apparently that gives out crazy messages
too.

You know what I love about email? The fact that it's the most permanent
thing in many people's lives.






--
Neha Viswanathan
+44(0) 77695 65886
London, UK

http://withinandwithout.com |
http://globalvoicesonline.org

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