Dolours Price

In her later life, Price was a vocal opponent of the Irish peace process, Sinn Fein, and Gerry Adams.

[1] Christina's sister Bridie Dolan was blinded and lost both hands in an accident handling IRA explosives, and lived with the family.

[4][5]: 9–13 [1] Dolours attended St Dominic's Grammar School on the Falls Road, a classmate of Mary Leneghan (later McAleese; later president of the Irish Republic, 1997–2011).

[1] On the back of the hunger-striking campaign, her father contested West Belfast at the UK General Election of February 1974, receiving 5,662 votes (11.9%).

[8] The Price sisters, Gerry Kelly, and Hugh Feeney were moved to Northern Ireland prisons in 1975 as a result of an IRA truce.

[9] In 1980 Price received the Royal Prerogative of Mercy, and was freed on humanitarian grounds in 1981 (having served seven years), suffering from anorexia nervosa brought on by her experience of fasting and force-feeding.

[12] Price was a contributor to The Blanket, an online journal edited by former Provisional IRA member Anthony McIntyre, until it ceased publication in 2008.

[22] Oral historians from Boston College's Belfast Project interviewed both Price and her fellow IRA paramilitary Brendan Hughes between 2001 and 2006.

A spokesman for the college stated that "our position is that the premature release of the tapes could threaten the safety of the participants, the enterprise of oral history, and the ongoing peace and reconciliation process in Northern Ireland.

"[23] In June 2011, US federal prosecutors asked a judge to require the college to release the tapes to comply with treaty obligations with the United Kingdom.

In January 2013 Price died, and in April 2013, the Supreme Court turned away an appeal that sought to keep the interviews from being supplied to the PSNI.

[28] On 24 January 2013, Price was found dead at her Malahide, County Dublin home, from a toxic effect of mixing prescribed sedative and anti-depressant medication.

[30] In 2018, the non-fiction book Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland by journalist Patrick Radden Keefe was published.

[32] In the 2024 TV limited series Say Nothing, based on Keefe's book, Price is portrayed by Lola Petticrew and Maxine Peake.