Both Dolours and her sister Marian Price became involved in
Irish republicanism in the late 1960s. They participated in the Belfast to Derry civil rights march in January 1969 and were attacked in the
Burntollet Bridge incident. as they were boarding a flight to Ireland. They were tried and convicted at the Great Hall in
Winchester Castle on 1973. Although originally sentenced to
life imprisonment, which was to run concurrently for each criminal charge, their sentence was eventually reduced to 20 years. Both sisters immediately went on a
hunger strike, demanding to be moved to a women's prison in Northern Ireland. The hunger strike lasted for 208 days because the women were
force-fed by prison authorities for 165 days. This was done by holding their mouths open with
callipers, while liquid nourishment was poured into a tube into their throats. After this process was stopped on 18 May 1974, the sisters continued their strike until 7 June. The
International Medical Council later ruled the practice of force-feeding hunger strikers unethical. The Price sisters, Gerry Kelly and Hugh Feeney were moved to Northern Ireland prisons in 1975 as a result of an IRA truce. In May 1980 both sisters received the
Royal Prerogative of Mercy, and Dolours 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. Price's health improved after her release but she struggled with disordered eating throughout the remainder of her life. The Price sisters remained active politically. In the late 1990s, Price and her sister claimed that they had been threatened by their former colleagues in the IRA and
Sinn Féin for publicly opposing the
Good Friday Agreement (i.e. the cessation of the IRA's military campaign). Price was a contributor to
The Blanket, an online journal edited by former Provisional IRA member
Anthony McIntyre, until it ceased publication in 2008. In her articles, she accused several former colleagues of betraying the cause of Irish republicanism. ==Personal life==