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The Mahabharata, Volume 7: Book 11: The Book of the Women Book 12: The Book of Peace, Part 1
 
 
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The Mahabharata, Volume 7: Book 11: The Book of the Women Book 12: The Book of Peace, Part 1 [Hardcover]

James L. Fitzgerald (Editor, Translator)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

February 15, 2003 0226252507 978-0226252506 1
What is found in this epic may be elsewhere;
What is not in this epic is nowhere else.
—from The Mahabharata

The second longest poem in world literature, The Mahabharata is an epic tale, replete with legends, romances, theology, and metaphysical doctrine written in Sanskrit. One of the foundational elements in Hindu culture, this great work consists of nearly 75,000 stanzas in eighteen books, and this volume marks the much anticipated resumption of its first complete modern English translation. With the first three volumes, the late J. A. B. van Buitenen had taken his translation up to the threshold of the great war that is central to the epic. Now James Fitzgerald resumes this work with translations of the books that chronicle the wars aftermath: The Book of Women and part one of The Book of Peace. These books constitute volume 7 of the projected ten-volume edition. Volumes 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, and 10 of the series will be published over the next several years.

In his introductions to these books, Fitzgerald examines the rhetoric of The Mahabharatas representations of the wars aftermath. Indeed, the theme of The Book of Women is the grief of the women left by warriors slain in battle. The book details the keening of palace ladies as they see their dead husbands and sons, and it culminates in a mass cremation where the womens tears turn into soothing libations that help wash the deaths away. Fitzgerald shows that the portrayal of the womens grief is much more than a sympathetic portrait of the sufferings of war. The scenes of mourning in The Book of Women lead into a crisis of conscience that is central to The Book of Peace and, Fitzgerald argues, the entire Mahabharata. In this book, the man who has won power in the great war is torn between his own sense of guilt and remorse and the obligation to rule which ultimately he is persuaded to embrace.

The Mahabharata is a powerful work that has inspired awe and wonder for centuries. With a penetrating glimpse into the trauma of war, this volume offers two of its most timely and unforgettable chapters.

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The Mahabharata, Volume 7: Book 11: The Book of the Women Book 12: The Book of Peace, Part 1 + The Mahabharata, Volume 3: Book 4:  The Book of the Virata; Book 5: The Book of the Effort + The Mahabharata, Volume 2: Book 2:  The Book of Assembly; Book 3: The Book of the Forest
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Editorial Reviews

Review

"The resumption of the publication of the English Mahabharata is a cause for celebration among Indologists as well as readers throughout the world, and this audience owes a great deal of gratitude to Fitzgerald for his efforts as translator and editor. . . . Readers of the Mahabharata can eagerly look forward to the future volumes of the series, and are greatly indebted to James Fitzgerald for his continued labors to bring the great Indian epic to a modern English audience.”



(Whitney Cox South Asia News )

"[Fitzgerald] must now be regarded as among the great Mahabharata scholars of our time. The present volume has been under production for more than twenty years, and is a work of great maturity and meticulousness. . . . Fitzgerald has written a long introduction . . . that is must reading for all scholars of Indian literature and religion. . . . The translation is excellent, and will not be replaced in the foreseeablew future."
(Frederick M. Smith Religious Studies Review )

"Ther Chicago Mahabharata has resumed. Now more than ever, it is an epic undertaking. . . .  Beyond giving a readable translation of the text, Fitzgerald has done just about all that could be done to enable an English reader to savor the structure, stature, density, and significance of these parts of the Mahabharata. . . . The University of Chicago Press has edited and produced the volume so beautifully that it reignites the desire for the whole set to be done."
(Willis G. Regier MLN )

"Fitzgerald is to be congratulated for continuing the high standards set by van Buitenen. . . . If this volume is any indication of future volumes, readers are indeed in for a rich treat."
(Carl Olson Hindu Studies )

"This book is probably the most important Indological publication since Van Buitenen''s 1978 translation of books four and five. . . . It is difficult realistically to imagine a more serious, careful and timely translation than this one."
(Simon Brodbeck South Asian Research )

From the Inside Flap

What is found in this epic may be elsewhere;
What is not in this epic is nowhere else.
—from The Mahabharata

The second longest poem in world literature, The Mahabharata is an epic tale, replete with legends, romances, theology, and metaphysical doctrine written in Sanskrit. One of the foundational elements in Hindu culture, this great work consists of nearly 75,000 stanzas in eighteen books, and this volume marks the much anticipated resumption of its first complete modern English translation. With the first three volumes, the late J. A. B. van Buitenen had taken his translation up to the threshold of the great war that is central to the epic. Now James Fitzgerald resumes this work with translations of the books that chronicle the wars aftermath: The Book of Women and part one of The Book of Peace. These books constitute volume 7 of the projected ten-volume edition.

In his introductions to these books, Fitzgerald examines the rhetoric of The Mahabharatas representations of the wars aftermath. Indeed, the theme of The Book of Women is the grief of the women left by warriors slain in battle. The book details the keening of palace ladies as they see their dead husbands and sons, and it culminates in a mass cremation where the womens tears turn into soothing libations that help wash the deaths away. Fitzgerald shows that the portrayal of the womens grief is much more than a sympathetic portrait of the sufferings of war. The scenes of mourning in The Book of Women lead into a crisis of conscience that is central to The Book of Peace and, Fitzgerald argues, the entire Mahabharata. In this book, the man who has won power in the great war is torn between his own sense of guilt and remorse and the obligation to rule which ultimately he is persuaded to embrace.

The Mahabharata is a powerful work that has inspired awe and wonder for centuries. With a penetrating glimpse into the trauma of war, this volume offers two of its most timely and unforgettable chapters.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 848 pages
  • Publisher: University Of Chicago Press; 1 edition (February 15, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0226252507
  • ISBN-13: 978-0226252506
  • Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 6.5 x 2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 3.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,450,120 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Heroic Continuation of The Mahabharata, March 17, 2007
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This review is from: The Mahabharata, Volume 7: Book 11: The Book of the Women Book 12: The Book of Peace, Part 1 (Hardcover)
The translator of this book and author of it's copious notes, introductions and vast amounts of other ancillary material, has done a great service to this series.

I put off buying this one after reading the first three volumes. I didn't understand why they continued the series out-of-sequence. I later learned the complex reasons why things came about this way, but will not go into it here. However, after I did finally give in and buy this volume, I was glad I did.

On the one-hand, Fitzgerald overdoes it with the supplementary material. (Being a bit of an OCD case myself, I had to read it all anyway.) And the volume is a bit over-intellectualized. (As if the first translator Van Buitenen wasn't intellectualized enough?)

In spite of the aforementioned difficulties, Fitzgerald really saves the series by doing a fantastically thorough job, if not overly-qualified, of putting the book in context, showing how it fits in to the as-yet-untranslated volumes. He sets the whole thing up so that one feels one really is continuing along without missing a beat, so to speak.

Also, he is the one doing volume 8, (he's overseeing staffs who will translate the others in due time). But Volume 8 will finish off the Book of the Peace, which is the most monstrously long of all the books of the MBH. In this way, he's ensuring the project really gets done eventually. And volume 8 is supposed to be not-to-long in the offering. By the time one reads both 7 and the upcoming 8, the other books should one-by-one, find their way to the press.

So Fitzgerald has really done the heavy lifting of taking over from where the late Van Buitenen left off. And he has done the heavy lifting by doing the hardest work himself. His effort should restore the faith of any former follower of this massive project who was confused when the thing stopped at the third volume.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Karna's grim description of the concluding bath of the great Bharata sacrifice of battle is a good description of the main theme of Book 11 of the Mahabharata, the Striparvan, The Book of the Women. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
ungrateful brahmin, tristubh stanzas, performing sacrificial worship, innate armor, brahmin behavior, seethe endnote, bad brahmins, brahminic society, salmali tree, offering sacrificial worship, dicing match, exalted brahmins, bathing shrines, second endnote, concluding bath, brahmin seer, royal rod, northern manuscripts, tiger among men, ascetic heat, ascetic suffering, brahminic tradition, ascetic observances, jungle crows, habitual virtue
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Royal Splendor, The Book of Peace, King of Law, Good Law, Holy Learning, The Book of the Women, Slayer of Madhu, Horse Sacrifice, God Dharma, Higher Mind, King Dharma, King Janamejaya, Rama Jamadagnya, The Dispelling of Grief, Great Indra, King Janaka, Lawful Merit, Trusting Surrender, Field of Kuru, Mauryan India, Supreme Person, The Song Sung, Triple Learning, King Srńjaya, Krsna Dvaipáyana Vyása
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