‘The Red Witch’: how communist writer, intellectual and activist Katharine Susannah Prichard helped shape Australia – The Conversation
Nathan Hobbys The Red Witch: A Biography of Katharine Susannah Prichard takes on the challenging task of sorting out the complicated details of Prichards life as a child, sibling, governess, teacher, friend, lover, wife, mother, aunt, grandmother, traveller, celebrity, journalist, poet, novelist, short-story writer, social activist, public speaker and communist.
Prichard spent critical years as a wife and widow writing fiction in her Western Australian home, but the image of her as an isolated writer captures only a small fraction of an otherwise crowded and committed public life.
Review: The Red Witch: A Biography of Katharine Susannah Prichard Nathan Hobby (Miegunyah Press).
It is remarkable that we have had no full-scale independent biography of Prichard to this date. There has been nothing since the work of her son Ric Throssell, who edited two volumes of his mothers writing and published a biography, Wild Weeds and Windflowers: The Life and Letters of Katharine Susannah Prichard (1975).
So The Red Witch is timely. It will prompt what we might call recalibrations of Prichards life adjustments to how we imagine the life and the combined literary and political careers even if it is unlikely to produce any major reassessment of her standing as a writer or, for that matter, a political activist.
It can be read alongside works by figures such as Carole Ferrier and Drusilla Modjeska, and later literary scholars, who have been rediscovering the role of Australian women as novelists, journalists and critics in the interwar and postwar decades.
Read more: Hidden women of history: Leila Waddell, Australian violinist, philosopher of magic and fearless rebel
Prichard is a key figure in Australian literary history, a key figure in Australias intellectual history, and a key figure in Australias left-wing political history.
These are challenging dimensions to summon and sustain in a single narrative, not least a biography that is centrally concerned with the details of its subjects family and friendships, her aspirations and fears, her domestic presence, her colleagues and comrades, and her sexual life.
Hobby manages the shifting focus of these concerns clearly, in such a way that there is no simple separation of public and private spheres. Friends and collaborators were continually struck by Prichards thoughtfulness and sensitivity in the public domain. But there are also few moments of private or intimate life that are free from the tensions and obligations of public, political or intellectual involvement.
Prichard was controversial as a communist activist, for those inclined to discover such controversy, but her friendships and family ties were seldom bound to political allegiance in any narrow way. They were more often defined by the intensity and commitment of the friendship she asked for and offered. Her letters share the passionate language of her fiction and some of its seductiveness, but also its toughness and directness.
The Red Witch is not written for scholars, Hobby explains, despite Prichards ongoing interest for literary critics and historians. It has been written for
a general readership drawn to the peculiar pleasures of biography: the true drama of a life, the glimpses of a lost but familiar world, the recoverable details of the past.
Hobby aims to show a lived life. The biography is largely successful in this aim.
Prichards father, a committed journalist and editor, was an arch-conservative. He was religious, later depressed, and eventually suicidal. The early portraits of him in Fiji with his family at the time of Prichards birth remain entangled in much of the story beyond his life, despite the outrageous distance Prichard travelled from her fathers aspirations.
Prichards early religious entanglements were in dialogue with her father. So were her later departures towards the causes of labour, womens rights and socialism.
Her initiative and originality emerged early in her taking on the tasks of governess, teacher, part-time student, and then journalist. These qualities were evident, too, in her early writing and involvement in local drama societies. Early contacts became lifelong friendships. She remained on close terms with Hilda Bull (later Hilda Esson), Nettie Palmer, and Christian Jollie Smith three women who also had remarkable careers.
In May 1906, with Prichard aged 22, the first episode of her series A City Girl in Central Australia appeared in New Idea. Soon after, she met her Preux Chevalier, W.T. Reay, a married newspaper editor and politician, who, the evidence suggests, became her lover, his presence coinciding with her stays in London, Paris and Australian cities.
Prichard remained a great traveller. Hobby also underscores the significance of Melbourne in Prichards maturation as a writer and in shaping her complicated political engagements. Her family connections and her activities in journalism and literary circles led to influential contacts, from Alfred Deakin to the academic and essayist Walter Murdoch, the poet Bernard ODowd and, later, Miles Franklin.
Prichards politics developed over the same period, through the whole range of socialist philosophies. She embraced pro-suffragist, rationalist and materialist positions, with what Prichard herself later called idealistic naivety.
The Great War confirmed her left-wing politics. She voted no in the second (not the first) referendum on conscription. Her commitment to peace was cemented in place at this stage, not least because of her brothers death in France.
The Russian Revolution would reinforce the directions her politics were taking, although its effect was largely delayed until the 1920s. Prichard was famously a founding member of the Communist Party of Australia in 1920, but her full political engagement did not materialise until the 1930s and 1940s.
Read more: Stuart Macintyre's rich history of the Communist Party of Australia recaptures a lost political world
Prichards political activity in this period, and right through to the 1960s, is extraordinary. She participated in a wide range of social groups, left-wing and womens associations, the Movement Against War and Fascism, the Writers League, the Australian Peace Council, and many more.
Her support of communism and the Soviet Union remained firm from the 1920s on. In her utopian book The Real Russia (1935), she displays an extraordinary passion and, in her own way, a modernist desire for change.
Prichards career as a novelist began in London, where she wrote Windlestraws, a forgettable light romance (albeit with an intriguing plot) that was not published until 1916, and her first published book The Pioneers (1915), which won Hodder & Stoughtons prize for novels from colonial and Indian authors.
The Pioneers has recently attracted new critical interest for its romantic investments, but also for its complicated portrayal of the Australian bush, its relative quietness, and its structure and characterisation. Prichards potential significance for literature, and Australian literature in particular, was noted in reviews at the time.
Hobby identifies Prichards major creative period as extending from the novel Black Opal (1921) through to Haxbys Circus (1930), a period that incorporates what remains her most read work, Coonardoo (1929), plus major short stories and drama.
Intimate Strangers, published in 1937 after numerous delays and revisions, just misses out in this listing, but its stories of sexual desire and violence and its psychological entanglements remain confronting.
What comes across throughout much of The Red Witch, right through to Prichards death, and alongside her sensuous identifications with nature, region and character, is the unglamorous dimension of the life of a working writer (with the adjective understood in its fullest sense).
The biography records this sense of her, evident from early existing notebooks through to her goldfields trilogy The Roaring Nineties (1946), Golden Miles (1948), and Winged Seeds (1950) and her last novel Subtle Flame (1967), published just two years before her death. It also reminds us that Prichards short stories and plays and her poetry are much less known than her novels.
Hobby covers the recent controversies surrounding Aboriginal representation in Coonardoo, but asserts the novels ongoing power. The goldfields trilogy has also attracted recent criticism. The trilogys take on historical scale and its persistent concern with key Aboriginal characters has been re-evaulated. Miles Franklin, its interesting to see, was one of the first to emphasise the central role of both women and Aboriginal peoples in Prichards fiction.
Prichards life was marked by the suicide of those closest to her her father and then her husband, Hugo Throssell and beyond her marriage by threats of sexual violence or rape. Personal life often exposed the tensions between fidelity, desire and intimate relations.
These later elements reappear directly or indirectly in her fiction, making it edgier and more powerful than the work of many of her contemporaries. It is more powerful, too, than any simple celebration of rural or regional Australia, for the two dimensions can be closely linked. There is little in Prichards fiction that sits comfortably with more mainstream investments in the Australian bush.
Prichards marriage to Hugo is, of course, central to the story, although it is placed here in the context of other romances, before and after. If a slow starter, Prichard was not addicted to celibacy, though close relationships seem more important to her than sex itself.
Hobby emphasises tensions and differences within Prichards marriage. Difficult marriages are analysed, sharply, if sometimes comically, in Prichards writing. But she kept returning to the marriage throughout the rest of her career, investing in the bonds of love and intimacy it represented. Her absence overseas when Hugo committed suicide no doubt burnt the story deeply into her sense of self and community.
Nathan Hobby offers a full account of Prichards private and public lives, but if I can read now as a literary scholar rather than a general reader The Red Witch presents only limited interpretations of Prichards fiction. It considers how and why her writing mattered in the past and again today, and the way the distinctive qualities of her literary work are often reproduced in her letters and other writings, but such readings are often present only in a sentence or two.
Similarly, The Red Witch offers only notes towards a sense of Prichards engagement in the intellectual history that her politics and literary aspirations demanded. Her extensive reading of Marx and other political literature is noted, but little of the intellectual or political imperatives of such reading at such a time is explored.
Despite disagreeing with the Communist Partys recent criticism of the Soviet Union, Prichard paid up her membership three days before her death in October 1969. Events such as the Spanish Civil War and Soviet communism itself are sometimes presented as being very remote from readers understanding. (The books referencing system asks a good deal from readers too!)
Read more: Judith Wright, an activist poet who was ahead of her time
The Red Witch joins a cluster of recent publications about Australian women authors from the interwar and post-war decades. This year has given us Georgina Arnotts edited Judith Wright: Selected Writings and Ann-Marie Priests My Tongue Is My Own: A Life of Gwen Harwood. Last year saw Eleanor Hogans Into the Loneliness, her account of the unholy alliance between Ernestine Hill and Daisy Bates.
Previous years saw new work on Miles Franklin, Nettie Palmer, Henry Handel Richardson, Zora Cross, Dymphna Cusack and Aileen Palmer. There was also Arnotts biographical take on Judith Wright, The Unknown Judith Wright (2016), and further back Susan Sheridans Nine Lives: Postwar Women Writers Making Their Mark (2011).
This cluster of titles suggests that we now have a rich archive of stories and studies of these writers lives and their personal and intellectual networks.
And yet my impression at the moment is that the institutional structures and support for such a grouping are disappearing rather than emerging, despite the enthusiasm we see for contemporary Australian fiction in our festivals, bookstores, reading groups, and among new postgraduates. Lets hope The Red Witch attracts new readers, for much of it will be news to many.
- Lawmakers pass bill mandating anti-communism instruction in schools - The Tennessean - March 28th, 2026 [March 28th, 2026]
- Communist Party of Swaziland: "Taiwan's president Lai Ching-te is unwelcome" - In Defense of Communism - March 28th, 2026 [March 28th, 2026]
- The Forgotten Buffy Episode That Secretly Endorsed Communism - Yahoo - March 28th, 2026 [March 28th, 2026]
- Latvian series gain momentum at Series Mania thanks to Aurora. Newsroom and The Last Divorce of Communism - Cineuropa - March 28th, 2026 [March 28th, 2026]
- The Forgotten Buffy Episode That Secretly Endorsed Communism - Giant Freakin Robot - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Ukraine: Zelenskys regime intensifies persecution of the Kononovich Brothers - In Defense of Communism - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Nepals election marks a rare democratic defeat of communism - The Hill - March 24th, 2026 [March 24th, 2026]
- What If Cuba Had Nuclear Weapons? The Limits of Peaceful Coexistence - In Defense of Communism - March 24th, 2026 [March 24th, 2026]
- TN bill would create 'Victims of Communism Day' - The Tomahawk - March 24th, 2026 [March 24th, 2026]
- Russian Communist Youth Congress in Moscow highlights need for a new Communist Party - In Defense of Communism - March 24th, 2026 [March 24th, 2026]
- Workers Representatives Council established in Turkey at the initiative of the Communist Party - In Defense of Communism - March 24th, 2026 [March 24th, 2026]
- Lights out: Cubas blackout exposes the hollow promise of communism - Washington Examiner - March 24th, 2026 [March 24th, 2026]
- European Communist Action: The anti-imperialist struggle of the peoples must be strengthened - In Defense of Communism - March 24th, 2026 [March 24th, 2026]
- Book review: Red Dawn Over China: How Communism Conquered a Quarter of Humanity - The Financial Express - March 24th, 2026 [March 24th, 2026]
- Massive KKE rally in Greece sends message of solidarity with Cuba: CUBA IS NOT ALONE! - In Defense of Communism - March 13th, 2026 [March 13th, 2026]
- Communist and Workers' Parties of America denounce Trump's "Shield of the Americas Summit" - In Defense of Communism - March 13th, 2026 [March 13th, 2026]
- Jordanian Communist Party strongly condemns the arrest of two members of its Political Bureau - In Defense of Communism - March 13th, 2026 [March 13th, 2026]
- Israeli communist MP warns: "Trump and Netanyahu risk dragging world into a forever war'" - In Defense of Communism - March 13th, 2026 [March 13th, 2026]
- Anti-imperialist rally in Cyprus calls for closure of British and U.S. bases - In Defense of Communism - March 13th, 2026 [March 13th, 2026]
- Trump to CNN: Cuba will fall soon, after 50 years of communism - cna.al - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- ECA: Statement on the 107th anniversary of the founding of the Communist International - In Defense of Communism - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- Communist Party of Turkey: "NATO bases must be closed immediately and U.S soldiers must be expelled" - In Defense of Communism - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- Communists from Iran, Israel and the United States condemn Trump-Netanyahu war in the Middle East - In Defense of Communism - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- AKEL: The attack on British bases confirms the dangers that their presence poses to Cyprus - In Defense of Communism - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- KKE calls for popular mobilization to disengage Greece from the USIsraeli war in the Middle East - In Defense of Communism - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- Communist Initiative of Cyprus: The island is becoming a target for retaliation - Shut down the British bases - In Defense of Communism - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- Tudeh Party of Iran on the death of Ali Khamenei and the right of the Iranian people to decide their future - In Defense of Communism - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- Shut Down All U.SBritish Bases in Greece and Cyprus! - In Defense of Communism - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- The posters that helped topple communism go on display in Westminster - ianVisits - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- Communist Party of Mexico: On the violence in Jalisco and the "war against drug cartels" - In Defense of Communism - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- KKE: Response to the slanderous attack by the Russian CWP and the CP of the Russian Federation - In Defense of Communism - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- Letter from the TKP to the KKE regarding the historical documents on the 200 communists in Kaisariani - In Defense of Communism - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- KKE condemns the threats by the US and the state of Israel against Iran - In Defense of Communism - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- Shen Yun Shares With Indianapolis Theatergoers Its Mission to Revive China Before Communism - NTD News - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- Red Dawn Over China: How Communism Conquered a Quarter of Humanity brutality behind the propaganda - Financial Times - February 14th, 2026 [February 14th, 2026]
- Colonialism and communism hand-in-hand: why West Bengal embraces the hammer and sickle - ndsmcobserver.com - February 11th, 2026 [February 11th, 2026]
- Communist Parties from across the world condemn U.S aggression and threats against Cuba - In Defense of Communism - February 11th, 2026 [February 11th, 2026]
- KKE calls on Mitsotakis government to reject Trumps Peace Council invitation - In Defense of Communism - February 11th, 2026 [February 11th, 2026]
- China Before Communism: Shen Yun Displays a World Almost Lost to Theatergoers in Tampa - NTD News - February 11th, 2026 [February 11th, 2026]
- Opinion | Conservatives see the bogeyman of communism everywhere - The Boston Globe - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Opinion: Alaska would thrive under communism - Anchorage Daily News - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- The Epstein scandal is an offspring of capitalism - In Defense of Communism - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- KKE in EU Parliament: In the face of new threats from the US, we demand: hands off Cuba! - In Defense of Communism - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Dr Brian Benfield on the regulatory state: A protection racket and the rise of new communism - BizNews - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Commemorations held in Bulgaria for victims of communism - The Sofia Globe - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Quote of the Day by Karl Marx: 'Necessity is blind until it'Inspiring quotes by the father of communism - The Economic Times - January 18th, 2026 [January 18th, 2026]
- Free the Economy podcast: Total boomer luxury communism with Russ Greene - Competitive Enterprise Institute - January 16th, 2026 [January 16th, 2026]
- Communism, Islamism and the 50 countries that most persecute Christians in 2026 - Contando Estrelas - January 16th, 2026 [January 16th, 2026]
- REPLAY: Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation Reflects on 60 Years of Cuban Terror - NTD News - January 16th, 2026 [January 16th, 2026]
- Communism in India is let down by its own incoherence - The Indian Express - January 16th, 2026 [January 16th, 2026]
- Texas requires students learn about 'perils of communism' in sweeping new curriculum overhaul - Fox News - December 31st, 2025 [December 31st, 2025]
- When communism is the only option - The Japan Times - December 27th, 2025 [December 27th, 2025]
- How a Wounded Tusk Is Rehabilitating Communism - The European Conservative - December 7th, 2025 [December 7th, 2025]
- Communism Defeated Fascism Eighty Years Ago and Will Defeat it Again: The Forty-Eighth Newsletter (2025) - Tricontinental: Institute for Social... - November 28th, 2025 [November 28th, 2025]
- Transcript: Ive Got No Problem With Communism: Hasan Piker on TRIGGERnometry Podcast - The Singju Post - November 28th, 2025 [November 28th, 2025]
- This weeks top comments from Tampabay.com include Cold-War communism and ACA benefits. - Tampa Bay Times - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- Trump in Miami: We have a choice between Communism and Common Sense - The Pavlovic Today - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- Trump says New Yorkers will seek refuge from communism in Miami - The Business Journals - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- In memory of the millions lost to Communism - The Institute Of Public Affairs - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- 19 People From Former Soviet Republics Are Sharing What Others "Just Don't Get" About Communism - BuzzFeed - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- 35 years later/ Why the monstrous crimes of communism in Albania were never punished - cna.al - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- The Pope gives the green light to 11 new blessed individuals killed under Nazism and Communism - Rome Reports - October 30th, 2025 [October 30th, 2025]
- Pope gives true light to the beatification of 11 martyrs of Nazism and Communism - omnesmag.com - October 26th, 2025 [October 26th, 2025]
- Are communism and socialism the same? - MinnPost - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
- Pope approves beatification for priests martyred under Nazism and Communism - Vatican News - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
- Analyst: World Split Between Communism and FreedomUS Only Now Waking Up - NTD News - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
- Pope Leo XIV authorizes beatification of 20th-century martyrs of Nazism and Communism - CatholicVote org - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
- Does communism have a future in India? - Scroll.in - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
- Trump Jr. says Mamdani victory may be needed to stop disease of communism in US - Washington Examiner - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
- Letter to the editor: Communism attracts followers by stoking greed - Washington Times - October 21st, 2025 [October 21st, 2025]
- Building the forces of Communism donate to the Revolutionary Communist Party today! - Revolutionary Communist Party - October 19th, 2025 [October 19th, 2025]
- From The Hindu, October 17, 1925: The war on communism - The Hindu - October 17th, 2025 [October 17th, 2025]
- Bill Maher says Trump is a success and slams young people embracing communism - Washington Examiner - October 15th, 2025 [October 15th, 2025]
- Beyond Post-Communism: Imagining the Future in Times of Transition - Universiteit Leiden - October 13th, 2025 [October 13th, 2025]
- Freshers success for the RCP: Students turn to communism for real answers - Revolutionary Communist Party - October 11th, 2025 [October 11th, 2025]
- Will Communism Win In NYC? - AM 870 The ANSWER - October 9th, 2025 [October 9th, 2025]
- Ivan Klima, author whose work depicted the tribulations of life and love under communism obituary - The Telegraph - October 7th, 2025 [October 7th, 2025]
- Americas Young Communists Really Believe True Communism Has Never Been Tried - National Review - September 30th, 2025 [September 30th, 2025]
- Soviet communism was not more successful at reducing inequality than other regimes - CEPR - September 28th, 2025 [September 28th, 2025]
- Communism surges in the US due to the brainwashing on the left [letter] - LancasterOnline - September 28th, 2025 [September 28th, 2025]