The Asian Age

Journey off singlehood

IN STATUS SINGLE, A PATHBREAKI­NG WORK ON FEMALE IDENTITY, AUTHOR SREEMOYEE PIU KUNDU EXPLORES HOW WOMEN, WHETHER SINGLE BY CHOICE OR CIRCUMSTAN­CES, FACE AND BATTLE SOCIETAL PRESSURE, SCRUTINY AND CRITICISM

- KAVI BHANDARI

Being single at 40 was the inspiratio­n for author Sreemoyee Piu Kundu to write a book that explores the many prejudices that single women face and weather. “There is a prejudice about being single and everyone asks why someone is married or not. But there are 74 million women in India who are single — divorced, abandoned, widowed or never been married. And the number is on the rise,” she says.

In what promises to be a pathbreaki­ng work on female identity, her fiercely honest and painfully vulnerable book, Status

Single, explores how women, whether single by choice or circumstan­ces, are under societal pressure, scrutiny and criticism. Be it the difficulty of renting an apartment, being charactera­ssassinate­d by one’s gynaecolog­ist, or slut- shamed as having slept one’s way to the top, even when one is successful profession­ally, a single woman’s life choices are the easiest to dissect and criticise.

“I used to write a lot of columns on being single. My own struggles of being single made me think of writing a book on the same. I have been writing on gender and sexuality for a long time. There is no specific target audience but I feel every Indian parent should read this,” she says. Status Single, her fifth book and first work of non- fiction, talks about how being a single woman in India after the age of 30 entails a multi- pronged and multi- layered struggle. The walls built by societal norms lead to taunting and even ridicule. The only way to survive is to ignore the remarks passed by narrow- minded people, and be in one’s own zone achieving things that will earn respect. “I feel women need to be economical­ly and financiall­y sound, and supported by their families when unmarried. It is an uphill task to struggle daily in a country where the highest validation of one’s gender remains marriage and motherhood. I am a single woman and 40 years of age, so I know how it feels,” she points out.

While being single allows a woman the freedom to make her own choices and walk a path of her own choosing, there’s no escaping the flip side. Sreemoyee says, “Sometimes it gets a bit irritating. For example, if I attend a wedding with my mother, someone will pull her aside and ask her why I am not married. All sorts of things are said about single women that are not right. I interviewe­d 3,000 women from all walks of life all over the country, so I know about the struggle they are put through,” she adds.

“I also feel that once women empowermen­t improves, there will be a vast improvemen­t in the lifestyle, attitude and mentality of a single woman,” she signs off.

I interviewe­d 3,000 women from all walks of life all over the country, so I know about the struggle they are put through SREEMOYEE PIU KUNDU

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India