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Katharine
Susannah Prichard 1883 - 1969 author
Katharine
Susannah Prichard (1883-1969), author and communist, was born in
Levuka, Fiji, the eldest child of Edith (born Fraser) and Thomas
Prichard, journalist. The family returned to Australia when 'Kattie'
was three and she grew up in Tasmania and Melbourne. Despite her
father's experience of unemployment she completed her secondary
education at South Melbourne College, but her mother's illness prevented
her attending university; she had to stay home and keep house. Prichard
later claimed that this experience sparked her opposition to economic
injustice; perhaps it stimulated her lifelong advocacy of woman's
right to equality in private and public life.
After working as a governess and schoolteacher, Prichard embarked
for England. Between 1908 and 1917 she travelled widely, working
as a freelance journalist and briefly for the Melbourne Herald.
When her novel The Pioneers won the Australian section of
the Hodder and Stoughton All-Empire novel competition, she returned
home a celebrity, determined 'to live and write in Australia about
the country and its people'. Her travels had brought her in touch
with a range of political movements, including a brief engagement
with Mrs Pankhurst's Women's Social and Political Union. The death
of her brother in action crystallised her opposition to war and
she campaigned actively against conscription. With the formation
of a Communist Party in Australia in 1920 Prichard found a vehicle
for her socialist and pacifist principles.
In 1919 she wed Hugo Throssell VC, son of a prominent Western Australian
family, and went to live in Greenmount, Western Australia. The 1920s
were rewarding years, during which their son Ric was born and she
wrote her most highly acclaimed novels, Working Bullocks
(1926), Coonardoo (1929) and Haxby's Circus (1930).
She shared first prize in the Bulletin's novel competition
for Coonardoo, which raised an outcry over her sympathetic
depiction of Aborigines and the love of a white station-owner for
an Aboriginal woman.
A period of intense political activity followed which left little
time for writing. Possibly Throssell's suicide in 1933 (while she
was in London) contributed to this. However, the observation and
experience of suffering during the depression, and the rise of fascism
abroad, provided many Australians with the impetus to engage more
fully in the action of their times. The Communist Party of Australia
now demanded total engagement from its members and Prichard's literary
skills made her a valuable Party propagandist. She lectured widely,
wrote pamphlets and articles for the Communist press and published
The Real Russia (1934), an exercise in counter-propaganda.
During the 1930s she helped Cecilia Shelley form the Unemployed
Women and Girls Defence Association, and also founded the Western
Australian branch of the Movement Against War and Fascism and a
Modern Women's Club. Prichard's fame as a writer contributed to
her high profile in the Party but her political activity led to
her being labelled 'Red Witch' and to denigration of her as a writer.
One commentator described her political involvement as an author's
search for 'colour', but she was respected and admired among working
people for her commitment to working class interests.
Prichard consistently argued for internationalism and also for a
distinctly Australian literature which realistically depicted working
class concerns. With Jean Devanny, she helped found the Writers'
League to promote this ideal and to provide encouragement to writers.
It was reflected in her own writing, especially in the goldfields
trilogy: The Roaring Nineties (1946), Golden Miles
(1948) and Winged Seeds (1950). Prichard considered these
to be her major work, a paen to the Australian workers which incorporated
Communist ideals within a radical nationalist aesthetic; conservative
critics praised her realism and humanitarianism while objecting
to the intrusion of propaganda in art.
Failing health and the cold war atmosphere led to Prichard being
less active in public life during the 1950s and 1960s. She never
abandoned her commitment to communism and the need to integrate
politics with art. In practice she was often forced to divide her
energies between the two. In a span of 50 years she wrote twelve
novels, numerous poems, plays and short stories and an autobiography.
Her political commitment developed alongside her identification
as a nationalist writer, and the complex and sometimes conflicting
interaction of these interests and activities contributed to the
mystique which surrounds her: some revere her as a great writer
and humanitarian and others criticise her as a misguided radical
who sacrificed her art to politics. She was influential and charismatic
and had a 'rage for privacy' which resulted in the destruction of
many of her personal papers before and immediately following her
death on 2 October 1969. She was one who aspired to be, in the words
of another communist poet, Vic Williams, 'Writer and fighter in
one human heart'.
Julie Wells
Ric Throssell Wild Weeds and Windflowers: the Life and Letters
of Katharine Susannah Prichard 1975.
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