History
and cultural aspects
For
centuries stuttering has featured prominently in society at large. Because
of the unusual-sounding speech that is produced, as well as the behaviors
and attitudes that accompany a stutter, stuttering has been a subject
of scientific interest, curiosity, discrimination, and ridicule. Stuttering
was, and essentially still is, a riddle with a long history of interest
and speculation into its causes and cures. Stutterers can be traced
back centuries to the likes of Demosthenes, who tried to control his
disfluency by speaking with pebbles in his mouth. The Talmud interprets
Bible passages to indicate Moses was also a stutterer, and that placing
a burning coal in his mouth had caused him to be "slow and hesitant
of speech" (Exodus 4, v.10)
Galen's
humoral theories remained influential in Europe into the Middle Ages
and beyond. In this theory, stuttering was attributed to imbalances
of the four bodily humors: yellow bile, blood, black bile, and phlegm.
Hieronymus Mercurialis, writing in the sixteenth century, proposed methods
to redress the imbalance including changes in diet, reduced lovemaking
(in men only), and purging. Believing that fear aggravated stuttering,
he suggested techniques to overcome this. Humoral manipulation continued
to be a dominant treatment for stuttering until the eighteenth century.
Partly due to a perceived lack of intelligence because of his stutter,
the man who became the Roman Emperor Claudius was initially shunned
from the public eye and excluded from public office.
In
eighteenth and nineteenth century Europe or around there, surgical interventions
for stuttering were recommended, including cutting the tongue with scissors,
removing a triangular wedge from the posterior tongue, cutting nerves,
and neck and lip muscles. Others recommended shortening the uvula or
removing the tonsils. All were abandoned due to the high danger of bleeding
to death and their failure to stop stuttering. Less drastically, Jean
Marc Gaspard Itard placed a small forked golden plate under the tongue
in order to support "weak" muscles.
Italian
pathologist Giovanni Morgagni attributed stuttering to deviations in
the hyoid bone, a conclusion he came to via autopsy. Blessed Notker
of St. Gall (ca. 840–912), called Balbulus (“The Stutterer”)
and described by his biographer as being "delicate of body but
not of mind, stuttering of tongue but not of intellect, pushing boldly
forward in things Divine," was invoked against stammering.
Other
famous Englishmen who stammered were King George VI and Prime Minister
Winston Churchill, who led the UK through World War II. George VI went
through years of speech therapy for his stammer. Churchill claimed,
perhaps not directly discussing himself, "Sometimes a slight and
not unpleasing stammer or impediment has been of some assistance in
securing the attention of the audience...". However, those who
knew Churchill and commented on his stutter believed that it was or
had been a significant problem for him. His secretary Phyllis Moir in
her 1941 book 'I was Winston Churchill's Private Secretary' commented
that 'Winston Churchill was born and grew up with a stutter'. Moir writes
also about one incident 'It’s s s simply s s splendid” he
stuttered, as he always did when excited.’ Louis J. Alber. who
helped to arrange a lecture tour of the United States wrote in Volume
55 of The American Mercury (1942) ‘Churchill struggled to express
his feelings but his stutter caught him in the throat and his face turned
purple' and ‘Born with a stutter and a lisp, both caused in large
measure by a defect in his palate, Churchill was at first seriously
hampered in his public speaking. It is characteristic of the man’s
perseverance that, despite his staggering handicap, he made himself
one of the greatest orators of our time.’
For centuries "cures" such as consistently drinking water
from a snail shell for the rest of one's life, "hitting a stutterer
in the face when the weather is cloudy", strengthening the tongue
as a muscle, and various herbal remedies were used. Similarly, in the
past people have subscribed to theories about the causes of stuttering
which today are considered odd. Proposed causes of stuttering have included
tickling an infant too much, eating improperly during breastfeeding,
allowing an infant to look in the mirror, cutting a child's hair before
the child spoke his or her first words, having too small a tongue, or
the "work of the devil."
Jazz
and Euro Dance musician Scatman John wrote the song "Scatman (Ski
Ba Bop Ba Dop Bop)" to help children who stutter overcome adversity.
Born John Paul Larkin, Scatman spoke with a stutter himself and won
the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association's Annie Glenn Award
for outstanding service to the stuttering community.
Fiction charactor Albert Arkwright
from British sitcom Open All Hours, stammered and much of the series'
humour revolved around this.