APPENDIX - The Institute for Advanced Technology in the …



7. APPENDICES

Salem Witch Trial Documentary Archive

Links to Images of Original Court Documents

According to Archival Collection

Alpha Block for Name Searching in

Salem Witchcraft Papers

[pic]

Personal Name Entries in

Comprehensive Historical Event Database

High Resolution Image of Original Court document

Essex Country Court Records, 9 Vols.

[pic]

Revised Edition of Salem Witchcraft Papers (not online)

Revised Edition of the Salem Witchcraft Papers (not online)

CURRICULUM VITAE

(shortened version)

Benjamin C. Ray

Department of Religious Studies

University of Virginia

Charlottesville, VA 22903

(434)924-6720, FAX (434)982-2363

bcr@virginia.edu

I. Education

l958-62 Bowdoin College (A. B.)

l962-64 University of Chicago, Dept. of Philosophy (A. M.)

l964-67 University of Chicago, Divinity School (A. M.)

l967-68 Oxford University, Institute of Social

Anthropology

l968-69 University of Chicago, Divinity School (Ph.D.

History of Religions, l97l)

II. Teaching & Administrative Positions:

1997 - 2000 Daniels Family, NEH Distinguished Teaching Professor

(three-year term)

95. Co-Principal, Brown Residential College, UVa.

1991 to present Professor, Department of Religious Studies,

University of Virginia

1991 Adjunct Curator of African Art,

University Art Museum, University of Virginia

1987 Visiting Professor, Dept. of Religion, Dartmouth College

l978-90 Associate Professor, University of Virginia

1976 Adjunct Asst. Prof., Dept. of Religion, Barnard College

1972. Visiting Professor, Dept. of Religious Studies & Dept. of Sociology, Makerere University, Uganda.

l969-77 Assistant Professor, Princeton University

III. Publications:

Books:

RECORDS OF THE SALEM WITCH-HUNT, Bernard Rosenthal,

Editor-in-Chief. Associate Editors, Benjamin C. Ray, et al

(Cambridge University Press, forthcoming, 2009)

A MAGIC STILL DWELLS: COMPARATIVE RELIGION IN THE

POSTMODERN AGE. Edited by Kimberley C. Patton and

Benjamin C. Ray. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000.

(Chinese translation, Peking University Press, 2005)

AFRICAN RELIGIONS: SYMBOL, RITUAL, AND COMMUNITY,

2nd. edition. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 2000.

MYTH, RITUAL, AND KINGSHIP IN BUGANDA. New York: Oxford

University Press, 1991.

Electronic publications:

SALEM WITCH TRIALS DOCUMENTARY ARCHIVE, 2002 to present



Contributions to Edited Volumes:

“La caza bruja en Salem, Massachusetts,” (Introduction), in Arthur Miller Las

Brujas de Salem. Madrid: Teatroespanol, 2007), pp. 11-18.

"Teaching the Salem Witch Trials" in Past time, Past Place: GIS for History,

ed. By Anne Knowles, ed., ESRI Press, 2002, pp. 19-33.

Journal Articles:

“‘The Salem Witch Mania’: American History Textbooks and Recent

Scholarship,” Journal of the American Academy of Religion,

(forthcoming, 2009.)

“The Geography of Witchcraft Accusations in 1692 Salem Village,” (William and Mary Quarterly, Vol. 66, No. 3 (July, 2008): 449-78.

“Satan’s War against the Covenant in Salem Village,”

New England Quarterly Vol. 80, no. 1 (March, 2007): 69-95.

“Salem Witch Trials,” Magazine of History, For Teachers of History

(OAH), Vol. 17, No. 4 (July, 2003): 32-37.

IV Current Research

Director, “Salem witch Trials Documentary Archive &

Transcription Project,” University of Virginia



V Recent Fellowships & Grants

UVA, summer travel grant for archival work, 2006.

"Salem Witch Trials Documentary Archive and Transcription Project,"

Collaborative Research Fellowship, National Endowment for the

Humanities 2000 - 2003.

National Endowment for the Humanities, EdSitement Award, 2003.

Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities, University of

Virginia, Fellowship, 1999 - 2001

Media Studies, Speculative Computing Laboratory: Temporal Modeling

Project, University of Virginia, Intel Corporation Award, 2001.

"Mapping the Salem Witch Trials," Electronic Cultural Atlas Initiative,

1999-2001 Research Award.

American Academy of Religion, Small Grant (for scanning original

Salem witch trials documents in archives in Boston), 1999.

VI Recent Presentations:

“The Salem Witch Trials: Recent Scholarship.” History Forum for Teachers of

Virginia Beach, Teaching American History, ODU-NSU Higher Ed Center in Virginia

Beach. VA. February 26, 2008.

“Using Court Records to Map the Salem Witchcraft Episode,” Modern Language

Association Annual Meetings, Panel on “Literary Geospaces,” Chicago, IL

December 29, 2007.

“The Geography of Witchcraft Accusations in Salem Village in 1692,” Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture, 12th Annual

Conference, Quebec, June 8-11, 2006

“Digital History: The Salem Witch Trials,” NEH Longfellow Summer

Seminar, Bowdoin College, July 14, 2004.

Designing GIS for Historical Research: Mapping the Salem Witch Trials," Conference on Historical Uses of GIS, Newberry Library, March, 24-28, 2004.

"Mapping the Salem Witch Trials," American Historical Society, Annual

Meetings, Chicago, January 18 - 20, 2002.

“Mapping the Salem Witch Trials,” panel on GIS maps, Social Science

History Association, Annual Meetings, Chicago, November 16, 2001.

"Tormented Past: Two Towns Remember the Salem Witch Trials," panel

Anthropology Undisciplined: Essays in Honor of Edie Turner, American Anthropological Association Annual Meetings, Washington, D. C., December 1, 2001.

"Salem Witch Trials: Documents, Images, and Databases."

National Initiative for a Networked Cultural Heritage: Building Blocks

Workshop. Washington, D.C., September 21, 2000.

University of Virginia

University Committee for Information Technology, 2003-

IATH - Advisory Board 2004-

Department of Religious Studies

Director, Distinguished Majors Program 2000 -

Director, Undergraduate Program 2004 -

Chair, Technology Committee 1999 -

VII Professional Honors/Awards

University of Virginia, Raven Society Award, 1993.

VIII Professional National/International Service

Scholars’ Panel, Digital Library Federation, June 2-3, 2004

Member, North American Team, Electronic Cultural Atlas Initiative.1998-2003

Daniel V. Pitti

Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities

University of Virginia

P.O. Box 400115

Charlottesville, VA 22904-4115

Email: dpitti@virginia.edu

Phone: 434-924-6594

EDUCATION

-University of California, Berkeley. MLIS. 1987.

-University of California, Los Angeles. C.Phil. in the History of Religions. 1984.

-University of California, Los Angeles. MA in the History of Religions. 1981.

-University of California, Davis. AB in Religious Studies. 1977.

RECENT EMPLOYMENT HISTORY

|1997 – present |Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities, University of Virginia. |

| |Associate Director (Interim Co-Director (2003-2004; Summer Director 2005, 2006, 2007) |

|1993-1997 |The Library. University of California, Berkeley. |

| |Librarian for Advanced Technologies Projects. |

DESCRIPTION OF RESEARCH AND SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT

Humanities Systems Architecture and Research

Associate Director at the Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities. Jointly responsible for coordinating project design and implementation. Projects include the following: Dante's Divine Comedy; The Lives of Saints; The Arapesh Grammar and Digital Language Archive; Leonardo Da Vinci's Treatise on Painting; The Chaco Digital Initiative; Exemplary Women Project; Salem Witch Trials; Uncle Tom's Cabin Archive; The Samantabhadra Collection of Nyingma Literature; William Blake Archive; Pompeii Project; Piers Plowman Archive; Rossetti Archive; and Valley of the Shadow. As principal text and database system designer, work with Institute fellows, faculty, and staff to develop systems specifications for description and digital representation of primary source materials and secondary analytic and interpretive materials; and develop standards-based encoding schemes to implement specifications. Serve on the TEI Consortium Board (Treasurer), as well as the advisory boards of several humanities research projects and publications.

Archive, Library, and Museum Standards and System Development

Currently collaborating with a team of international archivists to develop a prototype-encoding standard for the description of individuals, corporate bodies, and families: Encoded Archival Context (EAC). Beginning in 1993, jointly authored several successful proposals to develop an encoding standard for archival finding aids. In collaboration with national and international archivists, serving as the chief technical architect, developed Encoded Archival Description (EAD), first published in 1998, and revised in 2002. EAD has been or is currently being translated into French, Spanish, Dutch, and Chinese. Jointly authored successful proposals to the National Endowment for the Humanities to fund the California Heritage Digital Image Access Project and the American Heritage Virtual Archive Project, as well as related University of California and California LSTA proposals leading first to UCEAD, and later, the Online Archive of California. Work internationally training archivists in the use of EAD, and as a consultant to several consortia and projects.

PUBLICATIONS

"Technology and the Transformation of Archival Description" in Encoding Across Frontiers: Proceedings of the European Conference on Encoded Archival Description and Context (EAD and EAC), Paris, France, 1-8 October 2004 (Haworth Press, 2006).

"Designing Sustainable Projects and Publications," in A Companion to Digital Humanities, edited by John Unsworth and Susan Schreibman (Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing, 2004).

"Creator Description: Encoded Archival Context," in the International Cataloguing and Bibliographic Control (International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions, 2004) and a monograph from Haworth Press (2004). Also translated as "Descrizione del soggetto produttore. Encoded archival context" in Authority Control: Definizione ed esperienze internazionali (Firenze: Firenze University Press, 2003).

Encoded Archival Description (EAD) Tag Library, Version 2002 (Washington, D.C.: Society of American Archivists and Library of Congress, 2002). Joint author.

Encoded Archival Description on the Internet, special issue of the Journal of Internet Cataloging (Binghamton, N.Y.: Haworth Information Press), vol. 4, nos. 3-4. Editor.

"Encoded Archival Description: An Introduction and Overview" in Dlib Magazine (Washington: CNRI, 1999) vol. 5, no. 11:

Encoded Archival Description (EAD) Tag Library, Version 1.0 (Washington, D.C.: Society of American Archivists and Library of Congress, 1998). Joint author.

Encoded Archival Description (EAD) Document Type Definition, Version 1.0 (Washington, D.C.: Society of American Archivists and Library of Congress, 1998). Editor and joint author.

"Encoded Archival Description: The Development of an Encoding Standard for Archival Finding Aids" in The American Archivist (Chicago: SAA, 1997) and in Encoded Archival Description: context, theory, and case studies (Chicago: SAA, 1998).

"The Berkeley Finding Aid Project: Standards in Navigation" in Filling the Pipeline and Paying the Piper (Washington, D.C.: Association of Research Libraries, 1995), p. 161-166. Paper originally presented at the American Research Libraries/Association of American University Presses 4th Symposium on Electronic Publishing on the Network, November 1994, Washington, D.C.

"Standard Generalized Markup Language and the Future of Cataloging" in The Serials Librarian (The Haworth Press) vol. 25, no. 3/4, 1995, pp. 243-253; and: A Kaleidoscope of Choices: Reshaping Roles and Opportunities for Serialists (Ed: Beth Holley and Mary Ann Sheble) (The Haworth Press, 1995) pp. 243-253.

W. N. Martin

Associate Director, Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities

Assoc. Professor of Computer Science & Assoc. Chair of Computer Science

School of Engineering and Applied Science

University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22904

Phone: (434)982-2202; Fax: (434)982-2214 E-mail: martin@virginia.edu

Web: cs.virginia.edu/brochure/profs/martin.html iath.virginia.edu

Education

Ph.D. Computer Science University of Texas at Austin, 1981

M.A. Computer Science University of Texas at Austin, 1976

B.A.with honors Mathematics University of Texas at Austin, 1973

Professional Development

1999-present Technical Director, Inst. for Advanced Technology in the Humanities

2001-present Associate Chair of Computer Science, University of Virginia

1988-present Associate Professor, Dept. of Computer Science, University of Virginia

1982-1988 Assistant Professor, Dept. of Computer Science, University of Virginia

1981-1982 Instructor, Dept. of Computer Science, University of Texas - Austin

1975-1981 Research Asst. (J.K. Aggarwal, Sup.), University of Texas – Austin

Professional Activities

Society of American Archaeology

Senior Member, Institute for Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)

IEEE Computer Society

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

American Association for Artificial Intelligence (AAAI)

International Society for Genetic Algorithms (ISGA)

Technical Committee for Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence, IEEE

Program Committee, International Conference on Genetic Algorithms 1997 & 1995

Co-Chair, IAPR Committee for Computer Vision and Image Processing 1992-95

Chair, IAPR/IEEE Workshop on Visual Behaviors, 1994

Co-Chair Program Committee, Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition 1989

Phi Beta Kappa

Selected Publications

Martin, W.N., B. Schedl, P. Geary, B. Frischer, “Preliminary Results of the St. Gall Monastery Plan Digital Project,” 14th International Medieval Congress, Leeds, UK, July 9012, 2007.

Martin, W.N., A. Hocking, S. Plog, “Migrating Historical Archaeological Records in Digital Resources,” Society of American Archaeology 72nd Annual Meeting, Austin, Texas, April 22-29, 2007.

Martin, W.N., “Progressions: Space, Time and Text,” presented at the Chicago Colloquium on Digital Humanities and Computer Science, University of Chicago, November 5-6, 2006.

French, J. C., X. Jin and W. N. Martin, “An Empirical Investigation of the Scalability of a Multiple Viewpoint CBIR System,” International Conference on Image and Video Retrieval (CIVR2004), Dublin, Ireland, July 21-23, 2004.

J.C. French, J.V.S. Watson, X. Jin, and W.N. Martin, “An Exogenous Approach for Adding Multiple Image Representations to CBIR Systems,” Proceedings of the 7th International Symposium on Signal Processing and its Applications, Paris, July 2003.

French, J.C., A.C. Chapin, and W.N. Martin, “An Application of Multiple Viewpoints to Content-Based Image Retrieval”, Joint Conference on Digital Libraries, Houston, TX, May 2003.

Gunderson, J.P. and W.N. Martin, “The Effects of Uncertainty on Plans Success in a Simulated Maintenance Robot Domain,” Journal of Experimental and Theoretical Artificial Intelligence, Special issue Autonomy Control Software, 12(2) 2000.

Brill, F.Z., G.S. Wasson, G.J. Ferrer and W.N. Martin, “The effective field of view paradigm: Adding representation to a reactive system,” Journal of Engineering Applications of Artificial Intelligence, Special issue on Machine Vision for Intelligent Vehicles and Autonomous Robots, 1998.

Martin, W.N., J. Lienig and J.P. Cohoon, “Island (migration) models: Evolutionary Algorithms based on punctuated equilibria,” in Handbook of Evolutionary Computation, T. Baeck and D. Fogel, eds., Oxford University Press, New York, 1997.

Martin, W. N., and Aggarwal, J. K., “Survey: Dynamic scene analysis,” Computer Graphics and Image Processing, vol. 7, no. 3, 1978, pp. 356-374.

Collaborations

J.C. French, S. Plog, J.P. Cohoon, J. Lienig, B. Schedl, P. Geary, B. Frischer, K. Rinne

D.V. Pitti, R. Bingler, D. Ross, D. Germano, D. Parker, L. Reilly, J. Horn

Advisees: F.Z. Brill, G.S. Wasson, G.J. Ferrer, J.P. Gunderson, X. Jin, A.C. Chapin,

B. Thomas, A. Hocking

Thesis advisor: J.K. Aggarawal

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