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Hitched : the modern woman and arranged marriage PDF

208 Pages·2013·1.29 MB·English
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Published by Random House India in 2013 Copyright © Nandini Krishnan 2013 Random House Publishers India Private Limited Windsor IT Park, 7th Floor, Tower-B A-1, Sector-125, Noida-201301, UP Random House Group Limited 20 Vauxhall Bridge Road London SW1V 2SA United Kingdom The names of some of the interviewees have been changed to protect their privacy. This eBook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly. EPUB ISBN 9788184004724 To Maruthi, Babu Mama and Ma Introduction ‘You need to train your man like a dog with potential’ Uttara Singh Chauhan Star-crossed partners Vijaya Raghuraman The army wife Shreya Gopal A suitable Muslim Zainab Haider In a new country Meera Anthony From the artiste’s eye: staying in tandem Akhila Ravi From the artiste’s eye: scripting a successful marriage Ruhani Kapoor Peeling off the gloss Sara Jacob ‘The foundation of my marriage was tissue paper’ Ruchika Solanki You can’t hide and seek Smriti Rao Dealing with changing priorities Madhumitha Prasad Is marrying young a mistake? Vaidehi Raman Mark your territory Shwetha Srinivasan Riding the air waves Aarthi Varanasi When it all crumbles Preethi Madhavan ‘The arranged marriage set-up is like speed-dating’ Devyani Khanna The wedding hungama What do couples fight about in the first year? Past imperfect The things our parents don’t tell us ‘How do I jump into bed with someone I don’t know?’ The many guises of dowry You marry the man, not the family Rejection: inflicting it, handling it Your space, my space Living with in-laws: does it make sense? The clock is ticking The question of children What’s in a name? Minding your language The horror stories The other side: what men want Acknowledgements A Note on the Author T he idea for this book first took root over a phone call. Meru Gokhale, to whom I had once spoken of how I want to write a satire on Indian marriages, asked me if I wanted to write a serious book on arranged marriage. She refused to believe both that she hadn’t woken me up, and that I wasn’t qualified to write it. She asked me to think about it for a day or two, and get back in touch. I was in a dilemma. I’d known I wanted to work with Meru since I had first met her, not only because of the wonderfully fun conversations we’ve had, but because I’ve simply loved every book she has edited. I knew she is that rare breed of editor who can tap the right buttons in a writer’s head without the latter even realizing it. But I didn’t see how I could write a non-fiction work on arranged marriage. As I thought about the book, I thought mostly of my own brushes with arranged marriage. My mother would rather regularly, in my early twenties, tell me hesitantly that there was ‘an offer’. I would usually roll my eyes and say, ‘What’s the bid?’ Profiles would be emailed to me, and grammatically incorrect emails from prospective grooms’ parents forwarded. Most of these contained details of the ‘boy’s’ exam results from high school to college, his salary, his designation and his personality—‘outgoing’, ‘friendly’, ‘cheerful’, ‘vivacious’, and in one case, inexplicably, ‘rambunctious’. It was hard enough to find a ‘prospect’ whose hairline could be spotted, whose neck wasn’t caked with powder and who didn’t sport a Chulbul Pandey moustache. It was harder to find someone who didn’t think Orhan Pamuk was the name of a book. Most of my friends and I had spent our twenties whining either about our boyfriends, or about the sort of men we were being put in touch with. A lot of those accounts could go into a work of fiction. But how would I find people who had had arranged marriages, and who were willing to talk about them? And then, I realized that many of my friends—intelligent, smart, funny women—had eventually taken the ‘arranged’ route, and several of them were so happy that I’d even forgotten they found their husbands through a maze of matrimonial ads, horoscopes and awkward conversations. There are, of course, those who are firmly opposed to the idea of arranged marriage. One of my friends calls it ‘mercenary’, and says she knows people who marry based solely on the career progress and bank balance of their prospective spouses. There are those who are so resentful of the process, and the demand for ‘tall, slim, fair, beautiful, intelligent working’ women who must also cook well, that they respond with physical specifications of their own. There are those who are disillusioned and frustrated by the process. There are those whose marriages were technically arranged, but read like love stories. I began to put down a structure for the book, and realized it wasn’t going to be either didactic or dry. Marriage is one of the most crucial aspects of a woman’s life— whether she chooses to have an arranged marriage, wait for ‘Mr Right’ to bump into her by accident, or do without marriage—and a good part of our twenties and thirties are spent thinking about it. Will we meet the right person? Can’t the right person be found outside an arranged set-up? Are we settling? How do we know someone is right for us? When do we have children? What do we tell our relatives when they ask about ‘good news’? What if we can’t have children? Will we regret marrying the people we did? Can we study after marriage? What compromises will that involve? How about working after marriage? Is it possible to leave an unhappy marriage? Is having an arranged marriage an admission of defeat, a confession that we simply couldn’t find love? Once we’re married, does it really make a difference whether it was love or arranged, or do we deal with the same problems and enjoy the same harmony either way? Each of these questions yielded varied answers, ranging from facetious to poignant. To my surprise, I found that people actually wanted to discuss their marriages, explore their own reasons for getting married, and speak about the little pretences we all hide behind. A friend and I bonded over how, even if we were to have arranged marriages, we wouldn’t want people to know it, and would have to think of romantic back-stories—‘He saw me at a wedding, and asked his mother’s friend to set me up with him’; ‘My cousin and she went to the same school, and she

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If you are an Indian woman and old enough to legally bear children, chances are that an overweight relative has asked you, while fondly stroking their pot belly, When am I going to eat at your wedding? The modern Indian womans attitude to marriage and especially to arranged marriage is a confused on
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.