"This is a most useful and interesting book. The contributors are just the people one wants to hear from on this topic, a good mix of the established authorities in the field (particularly Hiltebeitel and Fitzgerald, the sometimes warring giants of Mahabharata studies) as well as other very good, well known and proven authors, and some very talented Bright Young People. The essays bring genuinely new insights to the major gender issues in the Mahabharata and the major approaches that have been applied to them, from classical philology to contemporary queer theory, including psychoanalysis and subaltern studies." - Wendy Doniger, Director of the Martin Marty Center and Mircea Eliade Distinguished Service Professor of the History of Religions in the Divinity School, University of Chicago, USA'This volume is just one of the many indications of the burgeoning health of epic studies in Indology today, and it is a welcome addition to this literature' - Stephanie W. Jamison, University of California, Los Angeles, Journal of the American Oriental Society, 128.2 (2008)"While discussing the many and diverse gendered voices and performances within the great Hindu epic, the specific focus of the book on gender as a cultural category embedded in narrative, sheds new light on previously untouched aspects of Mahâbhârata studies." - Fabrizio M. Ferrari, University of Chester, South Asia Research Vol. 30 (2): 197–209