British Citizenship and the Great War
Abstract
World War I had a profound impact on concepts of citizenship. Not only did hosts of people find themselves under new sovereignty at the end of the war, but many individuals had to contend with the experience of statelessness or redefinition as “enemy aliens” in countries where they had lived for decades. Patriotism, however, opened up new ways for previously disenfranchised groups to lay claim to the rights of citizenship and British women, as the following article shows, were particularly adept at drawing attention to their own war service to make a more general claim for that elusive signifier of liberal citizenship – the vote.
Department
History
Publication Date
6-1-2015
Journal Title
International Encyclopedia of the First World War
Publisher
Freie Universität Berlin Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut
Document Type
Article
Recommended Citation
Nicoletta F. Gullace. “British Citizenship and the Great War,” 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War, Jennifer Wellington, ed., Freie Universität Berlin Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut. (June 2015 & October 2015). http://encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net/article/citizenship_great_britain