If the answer is yes, you should check out Fundable. It's an interesting concept where all you have to do is get a group of people to pledge a minimum amount of money towards your cause/event/gift. When the goal is met, only then are the funds withdrawn from your PayPal-tied accounts. The service charges a modest 5% commission. So, from my calculations, if you budget to receive approximately 10% more than your actual goal, you should be golden.
Stanford Journalism Fellowship
Amy Gahran, now the editor at Poynter's E-Media Tidbits writes in her own blog that Stanford University is offering a fellowship that is conceivably open to bloggers and so-called Citizen Journalists.
The fellowship is at the Center for the Study of the North American West and includes between $3500-$7000 plus access to the Center's library.
Apply, if you qualify and if you are interested.
Shekar Kapur Gets Another Swing At Oscar
I just read that Shekhar Kapur will again direct Kate Blanchett in The Golden Age, a sequel to Elizabeth, a 1998 Oscar-nominated film. I remember Elizabeth and Shakespeare in Love both arrived in theaters at about the same time and they were both excellent period films.
Thrity Umrigar’s The Space Between Us: A Review
Angélique who won one of the copies of The Space Between Us that I was giving away has written in with a short review here. For the longer review visit her terrific site. I have one more copy of the book left. If you want it, follow these instructions. I'll randomly choose one lucky person to receive the book.
The Review:
A truly beautiful, but haunting, story about two women in India. One of them, Sera Dubash, is a well-to-do Parsi lady and mistress of a household; the other is her servant Bhima who is a poor Hindu woman who has been in Sera's employment for 20 years. These are two women from vastly differing lifestyles whose lives become intertwined.
Although this book can at times read like a social commentary on the haves and the have-nots of Bombay, the caste system and the power that wealth and education can wield in a country where so many people are poor and illiterate, it would be unfair to limit it to that because it is so much more! It's a poignant and touching book about relationships and relating – master to servant; daughters and mothers; husbands with wives and, best of all – friendships between women (despite hailing from different worlds, the two main characters, Sera and Bhima, developed a friendship based not only on their gender but also on a familiarity that enabled them to share a lot of secrets and tragedies)
The characters are just wonderful – flawed but endearing all the same. I loved both Bhima and Sera and while it might be tempting to love (or maybe at least pity) Bhima more for being poor, one sees that even the poor are not exempt from heaping their own prejudices on their fellow men.
While this story may have been set in the big bad city of Bombay, the city famous for its slums and equally famous for its flamboyant Bollywood stars and its filthy rich industrialists, the questions it raises in no way limit it to any one geographical setting because they are universal in nature. It asks: in a situation of conflict, what must come first, blood (family) or friendship? Is loyalty a more valued virtue or is truthfulness? Must the rich always win? Must the poor always lose?
Besides writing a beautiful story, Thrity Umrigar has also given us some wonderful glimpses into the city of Bombay and its people. The scenes depicting the daily struggles of Bombay’s poor – the queue for the communal toilet in the slums and the dismal government hospitals, as well as the atmospheric Chowpathy beach scenes – are by far the strongest. I also love her insights into the fascinating and endearing Parsi community of Bombay and the way she incorporates Indian speech patterns when her characters, especially Bhima, have something to say. I would dearly love to listen to an audio version of this book when they have one.
Not since Rohinton Mistry's “A Fine Balance” have I read such a wonderful novel set in the sub-continent. Highly recommended!
Push
The image above was originally uploaded by Sandip Debnath.
Jigar‘s most recent post mentioned Sandip Debnath's images on Flickr. So I had to take a look and found some very interesting images. This one may not be the best of the lot but it conveys a great mind shift in India in terms of what is “proper.”
Am I being a prude? Not really – but when I left India in 1983, you can bet I didn't see any ads with women baring their legs, shoulders or arms. This image shot in a Bangalore shopping mall makes so many statements about the way we look at women and the role of men in society. Care to share your comments?
I'll often post images here that are interesting, curious and even spectacular. Would you also like to have your images showcased on this blog? If so, join my Flickr community group also called Tiffinbox. Thoughts, suggestions, opinions always welcome, so please leave your comments below.
This post is sponsored by Seshu's Pipal Productions – Wedding Photojournalism At Its Best: Elegant. Memorable. Real.
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