Sauhard is a group of young people working towards youth development through various media, enabling the youth to voice their opinions, ideas, concerns and views over social issues.
Tuesday, September 30, 2014
MEDIA : "THE SELFIE OF SOCIETY" :Anshu Verma
Was it worth a news? : Vishakha Gandhi
If they do, it is their job to portray the character they choose to play, convincingly.
the problem with media is that they do propagate the character being played, and not the real person.
Sunday, September 28, 2014
Not just cleavage, also a backbone to support it: Husnaa Baig
The national news house did not stop there; it further asked a few questions. “We have always campaigned against the moral police. We believe there’s no shame in Deepika showing off her body, but does she now want us to first check with her as to which pictures of her - taken at public events - we can or cannot publish? Are we going to have a parallel censor board for pictures of film stars taken off screen but in plain sight of the world, as Deepika’s was? It’s not as if the pictures were shot with hidden cameras, or that someone sneaked into her home, invaded her privacy, and took those pictures without her knowledge/permission.”
Now amidst all this #IStandWithDeepikaPadukone has started trending on Twitter and the actress support is pouring in for the celebrity for locking horns with the Times of India. Thousands of people, especially from the Bollywood industry are condemning the media house.
This is not a stand-alone case, it has been led to this point by our ignorance and silence of the past years and hence we see this day. Not long ago in a separate case a journalist asked Parineeti Chopra about the fact that when girls are young, they “enjoy it” and when they become mature, they shout at men about the same thing. Clearly he was talking about sex or male attention in general, but his question missed the mark and received a fitting response from the young actress. Although, in the current case The Times Of India has become the scapegoat in this case, yet this is not the only media house to be blamed. Media has a crucial responsibility in shaping our consciousness. Our media is more powerful than we can ever imagine, it can help transform a Porn actress to become Bollywood actress and it can degrade a Bollywood actress to become a porn star. This is so because we have supported our media in objectifying our women. Although some may say that the entire film industry nowadays is thriving on sex to make the sale, yet it does not give the right in the hand of the News giants to debase the acting professionals.
Some may believe that amid all this controversy, both the media house as well as Deepika Padukone are winners. As this has acted as a publicity stunt for the actress whose film ‘Finding Fanny’ has released recently and further the promotion for Shahrukh Khan Starrer ‘Happy New Year’ is in full swing. This controversy simply highlights the fact the today’s society portrays women in a mortifying manner and objectifies them as a sex object for their physical appearance rather than for the talents.
We may be on a brink of an outbreak towards the media. After the demeaning response from The Times Of India, the silence has been broken by many from the acting fraternity. This is just the tip of the iceberg and we may see more fingers being pointed in the days to come. Here’s hoping that people in powerful positions understand the enormity of their voices and make them vocal at the right places for the right cause.
Friday, September 26, 2014
OMC!! (oh my cleavage): Shruti Chaturvedi

Tuesday, August 19, 2014
From strangers to a Production Family: Anushka Gupta
Wednesday, July 30, 2014
SEX AND GENDER – The difference that makes a difference.: Husnaa Baig
The very difference between sex and gender is still not clear to many. Sex is something you are born with , it’s biological ; while gender on the other hand is something that you make, probably also influenced by the society, but something in your mind of how you yourself want to live your life.
After almost 19 centuries gone, we still live in this “male dominant’ society .We the youth, day in day out, happen to see this inequality to a remarkable extent but not quite take a stand. Today with this extra ordinary interactive workshop with Mrs. Preeti Das, every single person in the room took up things they never thought of. Things that will help everyone to make their bit count.
In today’s era, though at the back of their mind, everyone is aware of the situation but the thread to connect to the masses is cut down; by the media, films, society. The leading newsletter shows the real picture of inequality without even considering the importance of change, extremely required. Films on that also make the female protagonist mostly revolving around the male.
There is still this ray of hope, trying to penetrate through people; eager to take a stand. There has been a change with female weight lifters, CEO’s, doctors, engineers, coming up to stand against.
IT’S BECAUSE WE CAN!
About the author: Husnaa is a first year student of Psychology who has joined Sauhard as a fellow.
Monday, July 28, 2014
Gender over chai: Ashini Jagtiani
Sunday mornings are the least demanding of all days. You sleep in, wake up and spend time contemplating on how amazingly tiring your week was. So naturally, when you are expected to wake up at 8 am and attend a seminar at 9, skepticism is bound to arise. I was undoubtedly looking forward to this particular talk since the speaker was one of the founders of The Comedy Factor, which I am a personal fan of. However, SUNDAY mornings. After ten alarm snoozes and a personal mind battle I got myself out of bed and ready for the seminar. What came next changed my day. Sauhard Fellowship 2014’s first seminar was a session on gender by Preeti Das, a film and gender studies expert.
The session opened with the question- what is gender? And really, come to think of it, what is gender? We hear about gender discrimination and gender equality, about woman empowerment and sexuality, but these are mere topics that fall under the study of gender, they do not define gender. Somehow, we always end up talking about feminism when we open the subject of gender and that is where the very first problem lies. Preeti tells us that gender studies is about understanding both men and women and is not biased towards any one sex. So what is gender? It is not sex, because sex is something biological. Gender is a social and cultural. The session’s opening itself questions some of our basic everyday actions. This lead us to the conclusion that society expects us to behave in a certain manner and each of us play a part and fit into those roles. For instance from the day a child is born his gender role is defined for him or her- blue for the boy, pink for the girl. Stereotyping is the basis of the problem where colors, clothing, food are categorized and associated with either femininity or masculinity. So the next time you ridicule a boy wearing a V-neck pink t-shirt stop and think why you are teasing him- you have fallen into the trap society has set for you.
Next, the conversation steered into the direction of language and semiotics and how they play a role in developing gender biases. Our languages are also patriarchal along with our society. Why are all Indian abuses directed towards the sister and the mother? Because women are considered a property of the man and directing the abuse towards the woman is equivalent to demeaning the man and tinting his “honor”.
We also talked about the role of the media and advertisements in shaping our thought. Traditionally both men and women are assigned a set of tasks and we are to comply to those roles. There has been an enormous paradox in the issue of woman empowerment. Technologically and professionally women have taken a step ahead, successful women are in every field. However, physically women have taken a step back and fallen into the trap of the beauty myth. From the diet industry to the cosmetic industry, large companies are benefitting from product management. An unattainable beauty standard is set for women where what you are, is just not good enough. You need that face wash to get rid of those pimples- conclusion pimples make you look ugly. You need to drink that soup to lose weight, conclusion- you need to lose weight. That make up will make you look flawless, conclusion- I am not pretty without that make up. To add to the horror, we have music videos where a hundred men drool over one woman and objectify her. There you have it- that is what the society expects you to be- perfect and pretty.
Through the session we went on several tangents talking about different kinds of situations we find ourselves in, in our daily lives. For instance, why does the male ego hurt when a woman pays? Is the man expected to pay? Why are girls expected to learn how to cook? How do women become “impure” when they menstruate? The session was concluded on a note that gender is important, however not every situation should be looked at through the lens of gender. Gender sensitization is necessary not the centralization of everything around gender. A lethargic Sunday morning was suddenly transformed into a productive morning of ideas, theories and experiences.
About the author: Ashini is a student of Economics with a passion in theatre and politics