148:"The arts do reach only a minority of the population, particularly the serious arts which we fund, but I believe you can extend the reach beyond the middle class... by education. What distinguishes the bourgeoisie is not a special gift from God but the fact that they've had an education and the opportunity to enjoy the arts."
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in his last decade. He was knighted in 1979, the last
Secretary-General so to be honoured before the Council itself was broken into separate councils for each nation in the UK during 1991. In his final year he wrote a partial draft of an autobiography, which was completed after his death by his
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Shaw was a prolific lecturer, published examples including "Culture and
Equality: The Role of Adult Education", his inaugural lecture at Keele; "The Relevance of Ruskin" (The Ruskin Lecture, 1987); and "Who Should Pay for the Arts?" (The Harold Dellar Lecture, 1987).
144:, where he remained until retirement in 1983. While at the Council he particularly promoted Arts Education, in line with his lifelong commitment to expanding access to the Arts. Shaw rejected a common assumption about arts funding:
22:(8 July 1918 â 15 May 2012) was a British educationalist and public servant. Originally employed in adult education, to which he remained dedicated in later life, he was Secretary-General of the
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Roy Shaw was born on 8 July 1918 in
Sheffield, England, the only child of Frederick Shaw, a steelworker, and Elsie Shaw, nÊe Ogden, who had been a 'buffer girl' in the steelworks during the
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38:. His father left the family when his son was four and died not long afterwards, and Shaw was brought up for a time by his grandparents (his grandfather was a miner in
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Shaw converted to
Catholicism in 1955, but left the Church in the late 1960s returned in the 1970s, although he eventually described himself as an
156:'s Conservative government in 1979, the council was forced to make major cuts to the budgets of the arts organisations it financially supported.
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Despite this, in the later half of his tenure Shaw presided over the council during one of its most difficult periods. After the election of the
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in the East Riding of
Yorkshire, based at Driffield. In 1947, he became a lecturer in the Department of Extra-Mural Studies at the
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98:, who later became a Dominican priest. In 1946, Shaw married Gwenyth Baron. They had seven children, including the sociologist
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83:, Birmingham, for a pre-university course in 1941 and later read German and Philosophy at
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237:"Sir Roy Shaw: Arts Council leader who fought right-wingattacks on public arts subsidies"
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While at
Manchester University he was an editor of the short-lived journal,
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widow, Gwen Shaw, and published privately by her in 2012 under the title
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278:"Written Answers to Questions - Government Directors on Company Boards"
57:. He worked first in a butcher's shop and then, after two years at the
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In his seventies, Shaw was for nearly a decade the theatre critic of
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214:'Catching the Rope: A Memoir of the Early Years 1918-1946'
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In 1962 Shaw was appointed head of Adult
Education at the
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Roy Shaw "An
Adjunct to the Advertising Business?!",
140:In 1975 he was appointed Secretary-General of the
110:Also in 1946, Shaw was appointed a tutor for the
79:. Shaw gained a place at the Quaker college at
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381:Published by the University of Hull, 1987.
372:Published by the Guild of St. George, 1987
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75:on 3 June 1939, three months before the
456:Governors of the British Film Institute
390:Roy Shaw "Whistle-blower in solitary",
304:Shaw in 1981, cited by Francis Beckett.
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426:Alumni of the University of Manchester
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451:Academics of the University of Leeds
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341:Newcastle-upon-Tyne: Bloodaxe, 1993
323:, 15 May 2012, accessed 16 May 2012
294:. 13 March 1967. col. 161â162.
87:, from which he graduated in 1946.
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160:Later years and religious history
288:Parliament of the United Kingdom
112:Workers' Educational Association
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436:British conscientious objectors
283:Parliamentary Debates (Hansard)
204:festival in Brighton and Hove.
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421:Academics of Keele University
142:Arts Council of Great Britain
24:Arts Council of Great Britain
170:and his critical account of
71:at the registration for the
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332:London: Jonathan Cape, 1987
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164:In retirement, Shaw wrote
102:and journalist Phil Shaw.
73:Military Training Act 1939
16:English arts administrator
55:Higher School Certificate
47:Firth Park Grammar School
363:Keele University, 1969.
180:The Political Quarterly
167:The Arts and the People
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317:Obituary: Sir Roy Shaw
261:Obituary: Sir Roy Shaw
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131:British Film Institute
69:conscientious objector
174:Spread of Sponsorship
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85:Manchester University
352:Political Quarterly
123:University of Keele
116:University of Leeds
60:Sheffield Telegraph
26:from 1975 to 1983.
63:, Shaw worked for
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65:Sheffield Library
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20:Sir Roy Shaw
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416:2012 deaths
411:1918 births
129:and of the
100:Martin Shaw
405:Categories
392:The Tablet
220:References
193:The Tablet
81:Woodbrooke
40:Shirebrook
30:Early life
92:Humanitas
209:agnostic
106:Career
172:The
127:BBC
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