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6 The Ethics of Resistance, 1910-1914
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Published:November 2003
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Abstract
The years between 1910 and 1914 were ones of dialogue and innovation within the militant suffrage movement as suffragettes struggled among themselves to define the extent and limits of resistance. Suffragettes continued to understand resistance as a component of active citizenship, but its means of implementation came under great scrutiny. A minority escalated violence into forms of terrorism including arson and bombing, but the vast majority rejected the use of violence. In the attempt to recast militancy away from the use of violence, militants worked across organizational lines and created new groupings. Read thematically, and not merely as a roster of organizations, it is clear that resistance remained an active, if contested, component of suffragettes’ conception of citizenship well into the Great War.
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