Author Chetan Bhagat, in an advertisement  for Shaadi.com
Author Chetan Bhagat, in an advertisement for Shaadi.com

Marriage 2.0

A rogue exploration of caste, class and gender on Shaadi.com
Published on

(This is an essay from our print quarterly 'Online-istan'. See more from the issue here.)

Eds: All Shaadi.com users' names have been changed to protect their identities.

On 17 May 2013, a few days after I joined Shaadi.com, the matrimonial website came up with a 'Love, arranged by Shaadi.com' campaign, with writer Chetan Bhagat at its helm. Both of the campaign's ads showed a newly married, English-speaking couple, at ease with each other, learning to understand love between themselves. Towards the end of the ads came Bhagat, the paperback messiah of Indian English who, speaking in Hindi, invited everyone to join Shaadi.com to arrange life partners for themselves: "Un bees laakh logon ki tarah! Like those two million other people!"

It's remarkable how two men with no personal history of arranged marriage – Bhagat's 2009 novel was a semi-autographical bestseller, based on his love marriage, while Anupam Mittal, the flamboyant 39-year-old owner of Shaadi.com, has never been married at all – came together to 'fix' marriages for young Indians through this electronic portal. If that sounded like an unintended, trifling irony, it was only the first of many I was to witness during an odd stint at this, the "World's Largest Matrimonial Website".

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Himal Southasian
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