Marc Shell

Marc Shell is Babbitt professor of
comparative
literature, a professor of English, a MacArthur Prize
Fellow, and these
days, as he puts it, “a more or less inaudible stutterer, or
stammerer.” That he was “slow of speech” was conspicuous in
his youth,
when he failed the fourth grade in his hometown of
Montreal. His school
principal explained to him that stuttering was a “sure
sign” of being
mentally deficient. He had also had polio, which some local
doctors
thought lowered the IQ. Today, when he lectures to an
anglophone
audience in Montreal and finds himself about to stumble
over an English
word—“money,” say—he substitutes argent, perfectly
legal in
that bilingual place and a stutterer’s coping device called
interlinguistic synonymy. He’s learned other such tactics
and tells of
them and of much else about this enigmatic disorder in his
fascinating
new book, Stutter (Harvard University Press).
Shell works in
several general areas. One is aesthetics and economics,
where he has
done a two-part study of “the internalization of monetary
form in
literature and philosophy,” starting with Heraclitus.
Another is
Renaissance studies, where he has written of sixteenth-
century European
politics and the works of Elizabeth I. A third is language
and
nationhood. His Harvard website notes, “Professor Shell
says
that these three areas are closely interrelated.” Shell is
also
co-director of the Longfellow Institute for the comparative
study of
the non-English languages and literatures of what is now
the United
States. He is married, with two grown children. These days
his son,
reports Shell, “is the only person I know who counts
himself free to
tease me about my speech.”
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Series
Books:Stutter, January 2006
Hardcover
Polio and Its Aftermath, June 2005
Hardcover
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