Together, the essays provide a nuanced and multifaceted examination of ahi?sa as a key concept in shaping Indian religious and political thought from antiquity to the present. Though the chapters engage in a dynamic scholarly conversation, each essay is self-contained and would be an excellent addition to college courses on Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, religion and war, or religion and environmental justice. * Choice * Food, war, colonialism, racism, climate crisis: how might the philosophy and practice of nonviolence help understand and unravel these pressing problems? This collection of remarkable essays approaches ahi?sa from literary and philosophical perspectives, drawing from the Mahabharata, Bhagavad Gita, Yoga Sutra, and Jain resources. In addition to profiling historic texts, this important volume engages the thought of modern figures such as Gandhi and A.C. Bhaktivedanta, pioneers in bringing transformative Indic thought systems to the world stage. -- Christopher Key Chapple, Loyola Marymount University This approachable collection includes several nuanced analyses of nonviolence in the perplexing battlefield of the Gita and also explicates the varieties of ahi?sa in the subcontinent. Nonviolence is a tenacious through-line within yoga, food ethics, war, the external/internal aspects of actions, and the universal entanglements binding Self with other beings. Not only can readers reexamine the historical complexities of ahi?sa as a South Asian philosophical option, but they will find enduring practices relevant to human-animal ethics, religious pluralism, political equity, ecological justice, and other forms of structural violence that hinder planetary thriving. -- Brianne Donaldson, University of California, Irvine Through exploring ancient texts, traditions, practices, and modern interpretations, this multi-dimensional volume on ahi?sa advances critical and constructive analyses that hold the promise to elevate our awareness of pervasive violence and the necessary paths to confront it. Uniquely drawing from philosophical insights from a variety of sources to address contemporary challenges, including war, ecological injury, mutual distrust, and xenophobia, contributors from the Indic traditions demonstrate the value of ahi?sa not simply as a religious discipline or personal ethic, but a necessary way forward for our existential survival. -- Veena R. Howard, California State University, Fresno