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Autobiography is an impossible genre. Memoir is easier – the writer is allowed to present an aspect of their life, to create a story out of one of its strands or seasons. Autobiography has to try to include them all. The desire to remember and record names, dates, and places is in the tension with the need to craft a narrative. And different phases of life require quite different types of writing which might not go together. The problems of autobiography are on show in Justina Williams’ Anger and Love (Fremantle Arts Centre Press, 1993), but it’s an important, fascinating text.
Western Australian Joan Williams (1914-2008), who wrote as Justina, was a communist, a journalist, and a writer whose dedicated activism spanned from the 1930s to the 1990s. I was drawn to her autobiography because she was a friend of Katharine Susannah Prichard, yet it was the opening chapters of the book detailing her childhood which I found most compelling. I think the first chapters of autobiography are often the best, perhaps because of the dream-like quality of childhood memories; perhaps because writers are more conscious of their prose at the beginning of the manuscript. Williams’ childhood was spent at Kendenup near Albany in the 1920s, as the charming and eccentric CJ de Garis coaxed many families to buy into a scheme to grow, dehydrate, and can vegetables. Williams conveys poignantly the shifts in perception over time as she, her family, and the other residents come to realise that the egotistical saviour figure they have all trusted is a charlatan.
The rest of the book is set largely in Perth as Williams moves to the city to pursue a career as a cadet journalist, radicalises in her politics, and puts herself at the forefront of activist struggles across the decades, from the Spanish Civil War to Vietnam. I loved the portrait of Perth in the mid-century, her conveying of intrigue and drama in suburbs I know. Who would’ve thought there had been an active communist branch in affluent Nedlands?
Williams is more honest than many, and records experiences that would usually have been covered over and lost to history, including sex and abortion. Yet even though she’s honest, she’s not particularly perceptive about herself. Perhaps it’s the lack of ambivalence or doubt which makes me uneasy, but then I see those things as the most honest responses to much of life. Often certainty – anger, as the title suggests – is much more effective at driving action, and Williams seems a person of action. The narrative stops quite suddenly at the end of the Vietnam War protests, as if she was running out of energy or pages. There is no proper reckoning with the shadow of Stalin and the Soviet Union. ‘As a communist, I’ve made my mistakes and no doubt will make many more,’ she concludes, ‘and so will communist parties in any part of the world. But I am sustained by the belief that the scientific theory of Marxism holds the key to a just social system.’
Justina Williams’ second marriage, to Victor Williams (1914-2011), was a happy and productive partnership. They lived in Willagee for decades, just a few kilometres from where I was living with my grandparents of the same generation when I moved to Perth in 1999. In Vic’s obituary, I learned of him ‘locking arms with young comrades during the 2001 M1 blockade of the stock exchange’. I was there that day; it was a formative experience in my twenties and the inciting incident for my failed second novel, The Zealot. I wish I’d known about Vic so I could have witnessed his presence and remembered it – but I’m also just grateful to learn of this point of connection to Vic and Joan.
Justina Williams Anger & Love Fremantle Arts Centre Press, 1993, 247pp, ISBN: 9781863680417.
-Saturday 10am post #1
I interviewed both Joan & Vic in the 1990s on a few occasions about Perth in the thirties. Vic was tough & staunch, fairly scary actually though a font of sharp reliable memory. Joan was much softer. He was a true blue-collar wharfie who was in the political front-line his whole adult life (he was leader of the CPA splinter group in Perth until his death at an old age) & fairly scornful of the party bohemians despite being a gifted poet. They were both very close to KSP & Joan stayed with Katherine towards her end, looking after her.
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How interesting – thanks for stopping by, Dylan. They would have been a remarkable couple to meet. What was your research project? I’m just moving into the thirties, and am keen to understand the background. I have Joan’s valuable recollections of KSP in this book, but would be so pleased to find more – are the interviews available any where?
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I have been working on a history of the Perth Workers Art Guild for a few decades & it’s finally in the works for publication. There is probably a lot that will intersect with your turf as KSP is a central figure in my manuscript. I deal with the period 1933-1941. I met & interviewed on countless occasions most of the Guild figures (all now well & truly gone) & they all knew KSP well. Ric Throssell was also very generous with his time & permision to access his & his mum’s archives. All my countless hours of interviews are on cassette & transcribed minimally & messily by hand. I am happy for you to access them but that could be tricky as I live in Melbourne. I am hoping the book will be in print by next year (it’s looking fairly hopeful) & then the cassettes will likely go to Ivan King – the archivist for His Majesty’s Theatre.
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By ‘Katherine’ earlier, I meant ‘Katharine’. Autocorrect made me do it. Thanks Nathan & love following your blogs & KSP tweets.
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I’m pretty sure I also have copies of the scripts of both plays KSP wrote for the Workers’ Art Guild, ‘Women of Spain’ & ‘Penalty Clause’ which you are also welcome to.
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Dylan, I’m so pleased your Workers Art Guild book is finished and looking optimistic for publication. Your research must have spanned several changes of technology and the dying out of a generation – how valuable that you’ve recorded their stories! I’ll be coming to the guild later in the year and your writing on it will be invaluable. I only have the script for Forward One from the guild plays of KSP’s, so I’d be really glad to have those others, thank you!
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Well, if this is an example of your Saturday posts, bring it on, I say!
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You’re too kind Lisa! I was wanting to start with a piece of creative non-fiction, but if I didn’t write about this book now, I probably wouldn’t later. And it’s not reviewed anywhere on the internet that I could see.
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Well, you’re right about that, it’s not even listed at Goodreads. I can fix that, if you like, (because I’m a librarian there) but I’ll need the ISBN, publishing details, no of pages etc. If you add those to the bottom of the post, I’ll do it for you.
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Good idea – thanks Lisa, I’ve added bibliographic details at the bottom.
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I’m sure someone else mentions being from Kendenup before the war, I wonder if it was Kim Scott’s auntie Hazel. Got this far and checked, she was born there in 1925. Loved your first Saturday piece, loved the comments
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Thanks Bill! How interesting about the Kim Scott connection – she was born there in the period Joan writes about. Your memory is sharp. On the strength of Joan’s account, I reckon there might be a book in the Kendenup story; a curious chapter in WA history.
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