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THE BODYGUARD UNIT by Clément Xavier

THE BODYGUARD UNIT

Edith Garrud, Women's Suffrage, and Jujitsu

by Clément Xavier ; translated by Edward Gauvin ; illustrated by Lisa Lugrin ; color by Albertine Ralenti

Pub Date: Aug. 1st, 2023
ISBN: 9798765607473
Publisher: Graphic Universe

A graphic nonfiction account of how early 20th-century British suffragettes used jujitsu to literally fight for the vote.

Focusing on Edith Garrud, who co-owned a dojo in London with her husband, William, the book tells the little-known story of how a subset of activist women agitating for women’s suffrage were trained in jujitsu. They used martial arts to cope with the violence and police brutality they encountered while peacefully marching and assembling. Garrud taught self-defense to the Bodyguard unit, a group affiliated with Emmeline Pankhurst’s Women’s Social and Political Union. The colorful panels illustrating the action are dynamic and engaging, expressing energy, speed, and noise. Compelling historical illustrations and photographs are interspersed. The dialogue, which imparts background context, is mostly snappy but occasionally too obviously didactic. The book chronicles the several years leading up to the dramatic 1914 Battle of Glasgow, when suffragettes fought Scottish police who were trying to arrest Pankhurst. The narrative also offers important detours into the prevalence and general societal acceptance of domestic violence as well as schisms within the suffragette movement regarding the most effective and politically palatable tactics. Scenes between Garrud and her husband provide insights into their marital and work lives. One line confusingly implies that Japan was colonized, and the book disappointingly includes no sources. However, a foreword by scholar Elsa Dorlin and helpful backmatter, including a timeline and historical notes, add useful information.

Engaging feminist history attractively presented.

(illustration and photo credits) (Graphic nonfiction. 12-18)