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Tidbits About MBH How many different versions of the Mahabharata are known? The Bhandarkar edition is about 60,000-70,000 Shlok long, while at the other end the Southern edition is longer even than the 10,000 Shlok spoken of in the MBH's own self-description, while the Bombay and Calcutta editions (much more similar to each other than to the Southern) fall between these two extremes, lengthwise. The Bhandarkar editors omitted verses not found in all the manuscripts they consulted. that was the sole criterion. The introduction to each volume provides the full details. The omitted verses and other variations have been noted either as footnotes or as appendices, in particular the prolegomena by Sukthankar to the first volume of the Critical Edition should be read; it's very readable, despite being about philological matters that can so easily be presented in a boring manner. Apart from Sukthankar's prolog, this book may also be read to know which version contains how many verses etc. They have given comparative statements. It is the first book in DLI Bangalore if you search with 'mahabharata' keyword. This is not in Hindi as erroneously data entered. It is in Sanskrit as well as in English. Are differences notable? Do differences concern whole chapters or only some verses? Are these differences also in the section of the Bhagvad Geetaa there? Is some text of the MBH considered the best? If yes, Because? On the other hand, I am determined to read through the southern edition when I have finished reading through the Bhandarkar edition later this year, because it contains more of what I love, namely the MBH, and also because the principle of inclusion that governed the making of the traditional versions is in a traditional sense more Indian than the backward-looking, origins-obsessed, reductionistic edition of the Bhandarkar Institute. Also, some material that is very important in the MBH tradition, most notoriously the identification of Draupadee's savior in the Sabhaa Parv as Krishn, has been excluded from the Bhandarkar edition. So it's a matter of taste and perspective, which one you prefer, and in my usual indecisive manner, I plan to avoid anxiety by simply choosing them all. Almost all academic scholars use the Bhandarkar edition. David Shulman is the exception that comes to mind.
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Created by Sushma Gupta On 5/27/04
Contact: mahaabhaarat@yahoo.com
Modified on 12/08/12