Faculty
Remembering Mary-Ann Stouck (1941-2020)
Dr. Mary-Ann Stouck, a long-time member of the 間眅埶AV Department of English, died on April 4th. Highly regarded by her colleagues and students, she will be remembered for her outstanding commitment to university teaching and for her personal qualities of intelligence, honesty, kindness, and self-depreciating wit.
Mary-Ann and her husband David were a part of the 1966 generation of 間眅埶AV teachers and scholars. A graduate of McMaster University and the University of Toronto, she epitomized the primary concern of Canadian universities for exceptional undergraduate and graduate teaching. She was a Professor of Middle English at 間眅埶AV over 37 years and, as a colleague remarks, she loved teaching Chaucer. A former student, who followed her into the profession of English, remembers A learned and warm-spirited guide who took students seriously, and prepared them to engage with medieval tales on their ownin, of course, the deeply, expertly informed historical, conceptual context she provided. And she gave students the very special gift of learning how to hear Chaucer in his own voice, firsthand. From her instruction, they learned habits of scholarship, the delights that follow the discipline.
She was a knowledgeable and effective committee member in the department and a highly successful administrator. Late in the 1980s, the co-coordinator of the Humanities Minor Program invited her to teach an occasional course on the "Saints." But when Paul Dutton became Chair of History, she agreed to step in as co-coordinator (from 1993-1995) and spear-headed the drive to create a major program in Humanities and set up our joint major and minor programs with other departments. It was thus Mary-Ann who put us on a course to departmental status, which happened under Steven Duguid. She also played a key role in the Canadian Society of Medievalists in the 1990s.
After her retirement Mary-Ann served the West Vancouver SPCA with great dedication and, reflecting her love of animals, wrote two childrens books: Jeannie Houdini, A Hamster's Tale and A Fine Winter's Cap. Also in the 1990s she was appointed as a board member to the Leon and Thea Koerner Foundation, published Medieval Saints: A Reader (1999), and the extremely popular A Short Reader of Medieval Saints (2009) which is not just an abbreviated version of her earlier book but a quick transfusion of Saints for the busy student and reader.
Most striking was Mary Anns great courage during the final two years of her life, after she had been officially diagnosed as suffering from mesothelioma. She continued to meet friends and to say her good-byes without a trace of self-pity. When breathing became more difficult for her and ventilators were in demand at hospitals and care homes, she turned to MAiD for assistance. She died at home with her family around her, with dignity and grace.