Age, Biography and Wiki

Peter Abbs was born on 22 February, 1942 in Cromer, Norfolk, England, is an English poet and academic (1942-2020). Discover Peter Abbs's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 78 years old?

Popular As N/A
Occupation Poet, academic
Age 78 years old
Zodiac Sign Pisces
Born 22 February 1942
Birthday 22 February
Birthplace Cromer, Norfolk, England
Date of death 1 December, 2020
Died Place London, England
Nationality

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 22 February. He is a member of famous poet with the age 78 years old group.

Peter Abbs Height, Weight & Measurements

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Peter Abbs Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Peter Abbs worth at the age of 78 years old? Peter Abbs’s income source is mostly from being a successful poet. He is from . We have estimated Peter Abbs's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2024 Under Review
Net Worth in 2023 Pending
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Timeline

1942

Peter Francis Abbs (22 February 1942 – December 2020) was an English poet and academic, born in Cromer, Norfolk.

He was the author of ten books of poetry and numerous works on the philosophy of education and creative writing.

He was the father of writer Annabel Abbs.

Second son of Eric Charles Abbs, a bus driver, and Mary (née Bullock), a shop assistant, Abbs was born at Cromer, and grew up on the North Norfolk coast.

The bare landscape was to exert a significant influence on his later poetry, as was the walled garden at Upper Sheringham Hall, where his grandfather was head gardener.

His mother was deeply committed to the Catholic faith and this influenced his boyhood desire to become a priest.

1954

After leaving St Joseph's School in Sheringham in 1954, Abbs travelled to Liverpool to join Saint Peter's College, a seminary run by the Mill Hill missionary fathers.

1956

However, he quickly became disillusioned and in 1956, with the active support of his father, he left to continue his education at Norwich Technical College.

1961

Here he completed his O- and A-levels and in 1961 began a joint degree in English and Philosophy at the University of Bristol, which he completed in 1963.

1963

In 1963, Abbs married Barbara Beazeley; they had a son, Theodore, and two daughters, Annabel and Miranda, before divorcing in 2002.

1964

In 1964, inspired by progressive ideas in education, he trained as an English teacher, taking his first post at Filton High School, then a grammar school on the edge of Bristol.

His first book, English for Diversity, proclaiming the power of creativity and imagination, drew largely from his experience there.

1971

After three years of teaching, Abbs took up his first academic position as a research fellow in the University of Wales in Aberystwyth (now the University of Aberystwyth), where he edited the independent quarterly journal Tract from 1971 to 1981.

His time in Wales produced his first collection of poetry, For Man and Islands, as well as several works on English and education, including Autobiography in Education and Root and Blossom: the Philosophy, Practice and Politics of English Teaching.

1975

In 1975 Abbs became Lecturer in Education at the University of Sussex.

1981

In 1981 he published a 'sonnet autobiography', Icons of Time, which was particularly praised for the long sequence on the poet's relationship with his father.

1986

He took a DPhil from the university in 1986.

The university was to become his permanent academic home.

Committed to aesthetic education and the potency of Socratic learning, he became increasingly opposed to the dominant pedagogic instrumentalism of the day.

In 1986 he began editing The Falmer Press Library of Aesthetic Education, a series of twelve volumes on the theory and practice of teaching the arts.

The library proposed the radical idea that the six arts – drama, dance, art, music, film and literature – belonged together as a single community of expression and understanding, and that each discipline, seen both as an expressive and critical activity, should be represented in any balanced school curriculum.

While developing his pedagogical philosophy, Abbs continued to write poetry.

Drawing on his doctorate The Development of Autobiography in Western Culture from Augustine to Rousseau (1986), Abbs's ongoing project, The Story of the Self, is a critical history of Western notions of selfhood.

The work focuses on key figures who have shaped the tradition of introspection and reflexivity.

Related essays on Augustine, Dante, Petrarch, Montaigne, Rousseau, Nietzsche, Freud and Jung have already appeared in recent issues of The London Magazine.

1995

It was followed in 1995 by Personae and in 1999 by Love after Sappho; both collections ranged widely across the western tradition of poetry and philosophy.

In his poetry and in his poetics Abbs has consistently urged the need for musical cadence, metaphysical imagination and historic continuity.

2000

In 2000, he became poetry editor of Resurgence and helped produce one of the first anthologies of eco-poetry, Earth Songs.

2002

In 2002, having been made the first Professor of Arts Education and then Professor of Creative Writing, Abbs took up a new role within the Humanities department at Sussex, where he directed a D.Phil.

programme in creative writing.

During this period Abbs wrote his most passionate defence of what he saw as authentic education: Against the Flow.

This sets out his critique of the encroaching managerialism in the organisation of schools and, drawing on both seminal principle and good practice, posited a bold alternative: education for wholeness of being and the creative life.

2005

In later work, Viva la Vida (2005), The Flowering of Flint (2007), and Voyaging Out (2009), these elements found a further union, both sparse and wide-ranging.

2006

Abbs retired in 2006 and became Emeritus Professor of Creative Writing at the University of Sussex.

2020

He died in December 2020, at the age of 78.