“Historians have . . . [been] in denial of the fact that gender played an important role in history as it does in life. Domesticity and Power breaches this denial by not just ‘visibilising’ royal women of Mughal India but showing how complex their relations were with men as well as between themselves” SALEEM KIDWAI
“After Lal’s persuasive exposé of the inextricable links between the male and female, the political and domestic . . . it should be impossible to write about Mughal politics without considering domestic factors and issues of gender”