In 1998, the onset of the digital revolution plunged 22-year old Monica Lewinsky into the heart of a political maelstrom. Paraded and parodied online for her affair with Bill Clinton, then US president, Lewinsky became the subject of rap songs, postage stamps, memes and an online catchword for political sex scandal. At every suggestion of Clinton, be it Bill or Hillary, Lewinsky was dragged through mud. Google search engines would light up again and again and phone records of her alleged conversation with Clinton would become the trending topic of the day.
Breaking her 10-year silence on the scandal, Lewinsky recently wrote about her experience of public humiliation. Explaining how she had lost the comfort of being anonymous, Lewinsky wrote, “Trying to disappear has not kept me out of the fray. I am, for better or for worse, presumed to be a known quantity. Every day I am recognized. Every day. Sometimes a person will walk past me again and again, as if I wouldn’t notice. Every day someone mentions me in a tweet or a blog post, and not altogether kindly. Every day, it seems, my name shows up in an op-ed column or a press clip or two — mentioned in passing in articles on subjects as disparate as millennials, Scandal [a TV serial] and French President François Hollande’s love life.”
Closer home in New Delhi, on 23 August this year, when Jasleen Kaur, a student of St Stephens’ College posted a photograph of her alleged eve-teaser on her Facebook wall and asked everyone to share her post widely, there was an instant clamour for shaming the motorcyclist online and bringing him to ‘justice’. In three hours, her post on the alleged molester went viral. Men and women applauded Kaur for her courage and expressed their outrage and disgust at the alleged perpetrator. Some of them also highlighted the need to inform his family of his ‘shameful’ act.
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