{"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Fonds\u0026page=17\u0026view=compact","prev":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Fonds\u0026page=16\u0026view=compact","last":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Fonds\u0026page=17\u0026view=compact"},"meta":{"pages":{"current_page":17,"next_page":null,"prev_page":16,"total_pages":17,"limit_value":10,"offset_value":160,"total_count":164,"first_page?":false,"last_page?":true}},"data":[{"id":"viu_repositories_3_resources_207_c01_c01_c158","type":"Fonds","attributes":{"title":"\"Toward a Theory of the Third Party,\" by Donald Black and M.P. Baumgartner, Typescript, multiple drafts","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_repositories_3_resources_207_c01_c01_c158#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_repositories_3_resources_207_c01_c01_c158","ref_ssm":["viu_repositories_3_resources_207_c01_c01_c158"],"id":"viu_repositories_3_resources_207_c01_c01_c158","ead_ssi":"viu_repositories_3_resources_207","_root_":"viu_repositories_3_resources_207","_nest_parent_":"viu_repositories_3_resources_207_c01_c01","parent_ssi":"viu_repositories_3_resources_207_c01_c01","parent_ssim":["viu_repositories_3_resources_207","viu_repositories_3_resources_207_c01","viu_repositories_3_resources_207_c01_c01"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_repositories_3_resources_207","viu_repositories_3_resources_207_c01","viu_repositories_3_resources_207_c01_c01"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Donald Black papers","Academic Writings","Works by Donald Black, including collaborative works"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Donald Black papers","Academic Writings","Works by Donald Black, including collaborative works"],"text":["Donald Black papers","Academic Writings","Works by Donald Black, including collaborative works","\"Toward a Theory of the Third Party,\" by Donald Black and M.P. Baumgartner, Typescript, multiple drafts","box 13","folder 9"],"title_filing_ssi":"\"Toward a Theory of the Third Party,\" by Donald Black and M.P. Baumgartner, Typescript, multiple drafts","title_ssm":["\"Toward a Theory of the Third Party,\" by Donald Black and M.P. Baumgartner, Typescript, multiple drafts"],"title_tesim":["\"Toward a Theory of the Third Party,\" by Donald Black and M.P. Baumgartner, Typescript, multiple drafts"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1983"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1983"],"normalized_title_ssm":["\"Toward a Theory of the Third Party,\" by Donald Black and M.P. Baumgartner, Typescript, multiple drafts"],"component_level_isim":[3],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Donald Black papers"],"extent_ssm":["1 folder(s)"],"extent_tesim":["1 folder(s)"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Fonds"],"level_ssim":["Fonds"],"sort_isi":160,"parent_access_restrict_tesm":["The collection is open for access with the following exceptions:\nAccess restrictions apply to specific personal records under the terms of the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (F.E.R.P.A.) for all materials in Box 37. These materials will remain closed until about 2077.","Folders 7-11 in Box 55 are also restricted.","There are 22 mini DV's in this collection. Appointments must be made in advance to use media formats such as LPs, audiotapes, videotapes, films, CDs, and DVDs held by Special Collections. In most cases, materials must be reformatted before they can be accessed, sometimes at the researcher's expense. Please contact Special Collections via our online Reference Request form, https://small.library.virginia.edu/services/reference-request, to request access to these materials. Access cannot be guaranteed unless prior arrangements have been made."],"parent_access_terms_tesm":["This collection is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use materials in the collection in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s)."],"date_range_isim":[1983],"containers_ssim":["box 13","folder 9"],"_nest_path_":"/components#0/components#0/components#157","timestamp":"2026-04-30T22:52:19.998Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_repositories_3_resources_207","ead_ssi":"viu_repositories_3_resources_207","_root_":"viu_repositories_3_resources_207","_nest_parent_":"viu_repositories_3_resources_207","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/oai/UVA/repositories_3_resources_207.xml","aspace_url_ssi":"https://archives.lib.virginia.edu/ark:/59853/182","title_filing_ssi":"Black, Donald, papers","title_ssm":["Donald Black papers"],"title_tesim":["Donald Black papers"],"unitdate_ssm":["1935-2023"],"unitdate_inclusive_ssm":["1935-2023"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["MSS 15031","Archival Resource Key","/repositories/3/resources/207"],"text":["MSS 15031","Archival Resource Key","/repositories/3/resources/207","Donald Black papers","homosexuality -- social aspects","sociological jurisprudence","deviant behavior","social control","social conflict","sociology","justice, administration of","police reports -- United States","criminal statistics--United States","police -- United States","right and wrong","crime -- United States","sociology of crime, law, and deviance","morality and society","Race discrimination -- Law and legislation -- Virginia","The collection is open for access with the following exceptions:\nAccess restrictions apply to specific personal records under the terms of the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (F.E.R.P.A.) for all materials in Box 37. These materials will remain closed until about 2077.","Folders 7-11 in Box 55 are also restricted.","There are 22 mini DV's in this collection. Appointments must be made in advance to use media formats such as LPs, audiotapes, videotapes, films, CDs, and DVDs held by Special Collections. In most cases, materials must be reformatted before they can be accessed, sometimes at the researcher's expense. Please contact Special Collections via our online Reference Request form, https://small.library.virginia.edu/services/reference-request, to request access to these materials. Access cannot be guaranteed unless prior arrangements have been made.","Series I is on academic writings from Black and other scholars. It is split between two Sub-Series: Sub-Series A is on works either solely by Black, or works collaborated on by Black and other scholars, and Sub-Series B contains work solely by other scholars. Series I runs from box 1-17. Series II contains files and papers from Black's involvement in the professional and academic worlds of sociology and universities. Series II runs from box 17-21. Series III pertains to Donald Black's personal life. Series III runs from box 21-25. Series IV contains correspondence with organizations and correspondence on certain topics. Series IV runs from box 25-36. Series V contains restricted items, and is the only series in box 37. Box 38 houses a sociology t-shirt. The recent additions (boxes 39-55) to this collection are in a new series titled Additions and have subseries that are similar to the original arrangement. Subseries 1. Academic Writings. Subseries 2. Professional and University Involvement. Series 3.Personal papers and materials Series 4.Correspondence. Series 5.Roberta Senechal de la Roche papers","Some folders contain groupings of files that remain as-is from their arrangement by Black, while others contain files compounded into a more comprehensive grouping from different sources. \nSome items may be cross referenced under different series. For example, there is correspondence with Stanley Holowitz under both his personal file as well as under the topical files on correspondence with Academic Press. ","Donald Black was a world renowned theoretical sociologist and University Professor Emeritus of the Social Sciences at the University of Virginia from 1985-2016. Born in 1941, he received his bachelor's degree from Indiana University in 1963, his master's degree from the University of Michigan in 1965, and his PhD in sociology from Michigan University in 1968. Before coming to the University of Virginia in 1985, he was at both Yale University as a post-doctoral Russell Sage Fellow from 1968-1970, and then taught at Harvard University in their Sociology Department and Law School. In 1989 he attained the position as a University Professor, allowing him to teach in any department or school at the University including the Law School. From 1986-1989 he also served as the Department Chair of Sociology. ","Black was known for his study of the sociology of ideas and scienticity (the degree to which ideas are testable, valid, and original). His most important early work included \"The Behavior of Law\" (Emerald Publishing 1976), which advanced what is still the only general sociological theory of law--\"behavior of law\"—which is what people do in the name of law, including illegal acts as a way to manage conflict and assert grievances, particularly when legal protections are perceived as failing. He created the theory of \"Pure Sociology\" which explains social life by studying deviant behavior as a system of social control rather than a set of rules.  It is different from psychology because it makes no presumptions about an individuals experience. His work, particularly \"Crime as Social Control\"(American Sociological Review 1983), argues that crime can be a form of \"self-help\" to achieve justice, and it explains the variation in legal responses (like arrests) through social structures such as too much intimacy or lack of intimacy related to conflicts. Unlike most sociologists, he rejected psychological approaches and drew on  anthropological and historical materials and modern data, allowing him to explain variation in social behavior in all societies and across time. He extended his work to the larger universe of conflict management—including violence, avoidance, and toleration—which culminated in his major midcareer work, \"The Social Structure of Right and Wrong\" (Academic Press 1993). Black broke still more fresh ground with a third major opus, \"Moral Time\" (Oxford University Press 2011), which presented a radically new general and testable theory of the causes of conflict. He authored a series of brilliant publications, including the \"The Manners and Customs of the Police\" (Academic Press 1981), \"Sociological Justice' (Oxford University Press 1993), \"The Geometry of Terrorism\" in Sociological Theory (2004), and \"The Epistemology of Pure Sociology\". ","He was a fellow of the American Society of Criminology and the American Anthropological Association. In 2013, he received the Law and Society Association Harry Kalven Jr. Prize for outstanding scholarship. He received several awards from the American Sociological Association (ASA) and its Sections. In 1994, he received both the ASA Theory Section's Theory Prize and the Section on the Sociology of Law's Distinguished Book Award, for \"The Social Structure of Right and Wrong\". He was also the recipient of the ASA Section on the Sociology of Law's Distinguished Article Award in 1997 for \"The Epistemology of Pure Sociology\" (Law \u0026 Social Inquiry 1995) and the recipient of the ASA Section on Altruism, Morality, and Social Solidarity inaugural Outstanding Published Book Award in 2012 for \"Moral Time\". In addition, several of his books have been translated into other languages.  He was invited to lecture in numerous countries abroad, including Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Holland, France, Scotland, England, Poland, and Japan. He was on the editorial board for scholarly journals and edited his own series on \"Studies on Law and Social Control\" for Oxford Press.","Black was also a charismatic teacher who influenced many students of sociology. According to Mark Cooney, \"His classes were an intellectual treat for he saw teaching as an opportunity to develop new ideas.\" Beyond the classroom, he was an inspiring mentor ready to offer advice and encouragement, especially to younger scholars. He retired from the University of Virginia in 2016 and died in January 2024.","The collection also includes the papers of Roberta Senechal de la Roche, (spouse of Donald Black) and an American historian, sociologist, retired professor from Washington and Lee University, and poet born in western Maine and raised in upstate New York. She graduated from the University of Southern Maine and the University of Virginia, where she received a doctoral degree in history.  As a historian and sociologist, she specialized in studying theory on collective violence and social history. Her first major publication, originally titled \"The Sociogenesis of a Race Riot\", was later renamed \"In Lincoln's Shadow: The Springfield Race Riot of 1908\". The book examines the two-day race riot in Springfield, Illinois, which resulted in the displacement of thousands of Black residents, destruction of their businesses and homes, and brutal killings of two African Americans. Her work won two distinguished prizes, cementing her contribution to the field. She taught courses on the American gilded age, the history of violence in America, the history of women in America, and a seminar on modern terrorism. ","Roberta was inspired by the sociological approach in \"Salem Possessed\", which used detailed social profiles to uncover community conflicts during the Salem Witch Trials. As a graduate student at the University of Virginia, she sought a similarly researchable topic in the field of collective violence. She chose the Springfield riot for its historical significance as Abraham Lincoln's hometown and its underexplored status in academic literature. Over eight years, she meticulously analyzed the dynamics of the riot, profiling both the perpetrators and victims and uncovering patterns that challenged prevailing social strain theories of violence. Her long standing interest is in non-state unilateral collective violence, such as rioting, lynching, terrorism, and vigilantism.","She is also a poet of Miꞌkmaq and French- Canadian descent. Her poems have appeared in the Colorado Review; Vallum; Glass: A Journal of Poetry; Yemassee, Blue Mountain Review, Sequestrum, and Cold Mountain Review, among others. She has two prize-winning chapbooks: Blind Flowers (Arcadia Press) and After Eden (Heartland Review Press, 2019). A third chapbook, Winter Light, and her first book, Going Fast (2019) are published by David Robert Books.","\nSources:\nCooney, Mark. \"Donald Black\" Member News \u0026 Notes. American Sociological Association, May 2024.\nhttps://www.asanet.org/member-news-notes-may-2024/#obituary","Roberta Senechal de la Roche's website.\nhttps://www.wlu.edu/profile/senechal-roberta","The Donald Black papers were received in increments over a period of years and have been interfiled except for the most recent additions which have been added as a series at the end.","This collection contains items from Donald Black's life and career, spanning from the 1930s up until 2023, ranging from personal memorabilia from his high school years, to his research in graduate school, to drafts of his major published works, to his professional involvement as a leader in sociology and professor at the University of Virginia, including forthright and meaningful correspondence with colleagues and adversaries about sociology theories from academic institutions across the world leading up to his retirement from the University of Virginia in 2016. ","His papers include his academic writings, manuscripts, conference papers and lectures, course readings, examination questions, syllabi, correspondence with students and colleagues, personal journals, and notes about ground breaking theories that he created in the fields of sociology, law, and criminology. They reveal the passionate, intellectual and personal thought processes of a dedicated scholar and professor who led a new way of thinking about sociology as a scientific approach to understanding social conditions, particularly situations involving conflict, by creating a model that was designed to be testable and that veered away from psychology and the study of the individual.","Roberta Senechal de la Roche papers are included in Subseries 5 of the collection. She was a full professor at Washington and Lee University where she taught sociology, history, and social history. Included are her articles, manuscripts, lectures, conference talks, correspondence with colleagues, and correspondence between her and Donald Black. Her published works of poetry have been catalogued separately.","Printed monographs and offprints in this collection have been catalogued and housed separately. Each catalogue record has the following local note: SPECIAL COLLECTIONS: Gift of Donald J. Black. From the Papers of Donald Black, MSS 15031.","This collection is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use materials in the collection in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).","Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library","Black, Donald J., 1941-","Senechal de la Roche, Roberta, 1950-","Mileski, Maureen, 1944-","Baumgartner, M. P. (Baumgartner, Mary Pat), 1953-","English"],"unitid_tesim":["MSS 15031","Archival Resource Key","/repositories/3/resources/207"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Donald Black papers"],"collection_title_tesim":["Donald Black papers"],"collection_ssim":["Donald Black papers"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"geogname_ssm":["homosexuality -- social aspects"],"geogname_ssim":["homosexuality -- social aspects"],"creator_ssm":["Black, Donald J., 1941-"],"creator_ssim":["Black, Donald J., 1941-"],"creator_persname_ssim":["Black, Donald J., 1941-"],"creators_ssim":["Black, Donald J., 1941-"],"places_ssim":["homosexuality -- social aspects"],"access_terms_ssm":["This collection is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use materials in the collection in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s)."],"acqinfo_ssim":["The Donald Black papers were given by Donald Black and Roberta Senechal de la Roche to the University of Virginia Library in several installments and have all been interfiled as one collection except for the most recent additions (2018-2024) (Boxes 39-55) which have been added as new series at the end of the collection. The dates of individual gifts include July 20, 2010 and December 28, 2010; April 27, 2011, May 4, 20, and 23, 2011, June 3, 10, and 14, 2011, July 8 and 15, 2011; October 7, 2011; November 8, 2012; April 22 and August 27, 2013; June 1 and 6, 2016. The recent additions are September 23, 2018; June 20, 2019; December 3, 2020; and October 11, 2024."],"access_subjects_ssim":["sociological jurisprudence","deviant behavior","social control","social conflict","sociology","justice, administration of","police reports -- United States","criminal statistics--United States","police -- United States","right and wrong","crime -- United States","sociology of crime, law, and deviance","morality and society","Race discrimination -- Law and legislation -- Virginia"],"access_subjects_ssm":["sociological jurisprudence","deviant behavior","social control","social conflict","sociology","justice, administration of","police reports -- United States","criminal statistics--United States","police -- United States","right and wrong","crime -- United States","sociology of crime, law, and deviance","morality and society","Race discrimination -- Law and legislation -- Virginia"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"extent_ssm":["27 Cubic Feet 55 legal document boxes, 1 artifact box, 1 oversize folder and 22 mini DV's"],"extent_tesim":["27 Cubic Feet 55 legal document boxes, 1 artifact box, 1 oversize folder and 22 mini DV's"],"date_range_isim":[1935,1936,1937,1938,1939,1940,1941,1942,1943,1944,1945,1946,1947,1948,1949,1950,1951,1952,1953,1954,1955,1956,1957,1958,1959,1960,1961,1962,1963,1964,1965,1966,1967,1968,1969,1970,1971,1972,1973,1974,1975,1976,1977,1978,1979,1980,1981,1982,1983,1984,1985,1986,1987,1988,1989,1990,1991,1992,1993,1994,1995,1996,1997,1998,1999,2000,2001,2002,2003,2004,2005,2006,2007,2008,2009,2010,2011,2012,2013,2014,2015,2016,2017,2018,2019,2020,2021,2022,2023],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe collection is open for access with the following exceptions:\nAccess restrictions apply to specific personal records under the terms of the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (F.E.R.P.A.) for all materials in Box 37. These materials will remain closed until about 2077.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eFolders 7-11 in Box 55 are also restricted.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eThere are 22 mini DV's in this collection. Appointments must be made in advance to use media formats such as LPs, audiotapes, videotapes, films, CDs, and DVDs held by Special Collections. In most cases, materials must be reformatted before they can be accessed, sometimes at the researcher's expense. Please contact Special Collections via our online Reference Request form, https://small.library.virginia.edu/services/reference-request, to request access to these materials. Access cannot be guaranteed unless prior arrangements have been made.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Conditions Governing Access"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["The collection is open for access with the following exceptions:\nAccess restrictions apply to specific personal records under the terms of the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (F.E.R.P.A.) for all materials in Box 37. These materials will remain closed until about 2077.","Folders 7-11 in Box 55 are also restricted.","There are 22 mini DV's in this collection. Appointments must be made in advance to use media formats such as LPs, audiotapes, videotapes, films, CDs, and DVDs held by Special Collections. In most cases, materials must be reformatted before they can be accessed, sometimes at the researcher's expense. Please contact Special Collections via our online Reference Request form, https://small.library.virginia.edu/services/reference-request, to request access to these materials. Access cannot be guaranteed unless prior arrangements have been made."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSeries I is on academic writings from Black and other scholars. It is split between two Sub-Series: Sub-Series A is on works either solely by Black, or works collaborated on by Black and other scholars, and Sub-Series B contains work solely by other scholars. Series I runs from box 1-17. Series II contains files and papers from Black's involvement in the professional and academic worlds of sociology and universities. Series II runs from box 17-21. Series III pertains to Donald Black's personal life. Series III runs from box 21-25. Series IV contains correspondence with organizations and correspondence on certain topics. Series IV runs from box 25-36. Series V contains restricted items, and is the only series in box 37. Box 38 houses a sociology t-shirt. The recent additions (boxes 39-55) to this collection are in a new series titled Additions and have subseries that are similar to the original arrangement. Subseries 1. Academic Writings. Subseries 2. Professional and University Involvement. Series 3.Personal papers and materials Series 4.Correspondence. Series 5.Roberta Senechal de la Roche papers\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSome folders contain groupings of files that remain as-is from their arrangement by Black, while others contain files compounded into a more comprehensive grouping from different sources. \nSome items may be cross referenced under different series. For example, there is correspondence with Stanley Holowitz under both his personal file as well as under the topical files on correspondence with Academic Press. \u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement"],"arrangement_tesim":["Series I is on academic writings from Black and other scholars. It is split between two Sub-Series: Sub-Series A is on works either solely by Black, or works collaborated on by Black and other scholars, and Sub-Series B contains work solely by other scholars. Series I runs from box 1-17. Series II contains files and papers from Black's involvement in the professional and academic worlds of sociology and universities. Series II runs from box 17-21. Series III pertains to Donald Black's personal life. Series III runs from box 21-25. Series IV contains correspondence with organizations and correspondence on certain topics. Series IV runs from box 25-36. Series V contains restricted items, and is the only series in box 37. Box 38 houses a sociology t-shirt. The recent additions (boxes 39-55) to this collection are in a new series titled Additions and have subseries that are similar to the original arrangement. Subseries 1. Academic Writings. Subseries 2. Professional and University Involvement. Series 3.Personal papers and materials Series 4.Correspondence. Series 5.Roberta Senechal de la Roche papers","Some folders contain groupings of files that remain as-is from their arrangement by Black, while others contain files compounded into a more comprehensive grouping from different sources. \nSome items may be cross referenced under different series. For example, there is correspondence with Stanley Holowitz under both his personal file as well as under the topical files on correspondence with Academic Press. "],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eDonald Black was a world renowned theoretical sociologist and University Professor Emeritus of the Social Sciences at the University of Virginia from 1985-2016. Born in 1941, he received his bachelor's degree from Indiana University in 1963, his master's degree from the University of Michigan in 1965, and his PhD in sociology from Michigan University in 1968. Before coming to the University of Virginia in 1985, he was at both Yale University as a post-doctoral Russell Sage Fellow from 1968-1970, and then taught at Harvard University in their Sociology Department and Law School. In 1989 he attained the position as a University Professor, allowing him to teach in any department or school at the University including the Law School. From 1986-1989 he also served as the Department Chair of Sociology. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBlack was known for his study of the sociology of ideas and scienticity (the degree to which ideas are testable, valid, and original). His most important early work included \"The Behavior of Law\" (Emerald Publishing 1976), which advanced what is still the only general sociological theory of law--\"behavior of law\"—which is what people do in the name of law, including illegal acts as a way to manage conflict and assert grievances, particularly when legal protections are perceived as failing. He created the theory of \"Pure Sociology\" which explains social life by studying deviant behavior as a system of social control rather than a set of rules.  It is different from psychology because it makes no presumptions about an individuals experience. His work, particularly \"Crime as Social Control\"(American Sociological Review 1983), argues that crime can be a form of \"self-help\" to achieve justice, and it explains the variation in legal responses (like arrests) through social structures such as too much intimacy or lack of intimacy related to conflicts. Unlike most sociologists, he rejected psychological approaches and drew on  anthropological and historical materials and modern data, allowing him to explain variation in social behavior in all societies and across time. He extended his work to the larger universe of conflict management—including violence, avoidance, and toleration—which culminated in his major midcareer work, \"The Social Structure of Right and Wrong\" (Academic Press 1993). Black broke still more fresh ground with a third major opus, \"Moral Time\" (Oxford University Press 2011), which presented a radically new general and testable theory of the causes of conflict. He authored a series of brilliant publications, including the \"The Manners and Customs of the Police\" (Academic Press 1981), \"Sociological Justice' (Oxford University Press 1993), \"The Geometry of Terrorism\" in Sociological Theory (2004), and \"The Epistemology of Pure Sociology\". \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eHe was a fellow of the American Society of Criminology and the American Anthropological Association. In 2013, he received the Law and Society Association Harry Kalven Jr. Prize for outstanding scholarship. He received several awards from the American Sociological Association (ASA) and its Sections. In 1994, he received both the ASA Theory Section's Theory Prize and the Section on the Sociology of Law's Distinguished Book Award, for \"The Social Structure of Right and Wrong\". He was also the recipient of the ASA Section on the Sociology of Law's Distinguished Article Award in 1997 for \"The Epistemology of Pure Sociology\" (Law \u0026amp; Social Inquiry 1995) and the recipient of the ASA Section on Altruism, Morality, and Social Solidarity inaugural Outstanding Published Book Award in 2012 for \"Moral Time\". In addition, several of his books have been translated into other languages.  He was invited to lecture in numerous countries abroad, including Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Holland, France, Scotland, England, Poland, and Japan. He was on the editorial board for scholarly journals and edited his own series on \"Studies on Law and Social Control\" for Oxford Press.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBlack was also a charismatic teacher who influenced many students of sociology. According to Mark Cooney, \"His classes were an intellectual treat for he saw teaching as an opportunity to develop new ideas.\" Beyond the classroom, he was an inspiring mentor ready to offer advice and encouragement, especially to younger scholars. He retired from the University of Virginia in 2016 and died in January 2024.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eThe collection also includes the papers of Roberta Senechal de la Roche, (spouse of Donald Black) and an American historian, sociologist, retired professor from Washington and Lee University, and poet born in western Maine and raised in upstate New York. She graduated from the University of Southern Maine and the University of Virginia, where she received a doctoral degree in history.  As a historian and sociologist, she specialized in studying theory on collective violence and social history. Her first major publication, originally titled \"The Sociogenesis of a Race Riot\", was later renamed \"In Lincoln's Shadow: The Springfield Race Riot of 1908\". The book examines the two-day race riot in Springfield, Illinois, which resulted in the displacement of thousands of Black residents, destruction of their businesses and homes, and brutal killings of two African Americans. Her work won two distinguished prizes, cementing her contribution to the field. She taught courses on the American gilded age, the history of violence in America, the history of women in America, and a seminar on modern terrorism. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eRoberta was inspired by the sociological approach in \"Salem Possessed\", which used detailed social profiles to uncover community conflicts during the Salem Witch Trials. As a graduate student at the University of Virginia, she sought a similarly researchable topic in the field of collective violence. She chose the Springfield riot for its historical significance as Abraham Lincoln's hometown and its underexplored status in academic literature. Over eight years, she meticulously analyzed the dynamics of the riot, profiling both the perpetrators and victims and uncovering patterns that challenged prevailing social strain theories of violence. Her long standing interest is in non-state unilateral collective violence, such as rioting, lynching, terrorism, and vigilantism.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eShe is also a poet of Miꞌkmaq and French- Canadian descent. Her poems have appeared in the Colorado Review; Vallum; Glass: A Journal of Poetry; Yemassee, Blue Mountain Review, Sequestrum, and Cold Mountain Review, among others. She has two prize-winning chapbooks: Blind Flowers (Arcadia Press) and After Eden (Heartland Review Press, 2019). A third chapbook, Winter Light, and her first book, Going Fast (2019) are published by David Robert Books.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e\nSources:\nCooney, Mark. \"Donald Black\" Member News \u0026amp; Notes. American Sociological Association, May 2024.\nhttps://www.asanet.org/member-news-notes-may-2024/#obituary\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eRoberta Senechal de la Roche's website.\nhttps://www.wlu.edu/profile/senechal-roberta\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical / Historical"],"bioghist_tesim":["Donald Black was a world renowned theoretical sociologist and University Professor Emeritus of the Social Sciences at the University of Virginia from 1985-2016. Born in 1941, he received his bachelor's degree from Indiana University in 1963, his master's degree from the University of Michigan in 1965, and his PhD in sociology from Michigan University in 1968. Before coming to the University of Virginia in 1985, he was at both Yale University as a post-doctoral Russell Sage Fellow from 1968-1970, and then taught at Harvard University in their Sociology Department and Law School. In 1989 he attained the position as a University Professor, allowing him to teach in any department or school at the University including the Law School. From 1986-1989 he also served as the Department Chair of Sociology. ","Black was known for his study of the sociology of ideas and scienticity (the degree to which ideas are testable, valid, and original). His most important early work included \"The Behavior of Law\" (Emerald Publishing 1976), which advanced what is still the only general sociological theory of law--\"behavior of law\"—which is what people do in the name of law, including illegal acts as a way to manage conflict and assert grievances, particularly when legal protections are perceived as failing. He created the theory of \"Pure Sociology\" which explains social life by studying deviant behavior as a system of social control rather than a set of rules.  It is different from psychology because it makes no presumptions about an individuals experience. His work, particularly \"Crime as Social Control\"(American Sociological Review 1983), argues that crime can be a form of \"self-help\" to achieve justice, and it explains the variation in legal responses (like arrests) through social structures such as too much intimacy or lack of intimacy related to conflicts. Unlike most sociologists, he rejected psychological approaches and drew on  anthropological and historical materials and modern data, allowing him to explain variation in social behavior in all societies and across time. He extended his work to the larger universe of conflict management—including violence, avoidance, and toleration—which culminated in his major midcareer work, \"The Social Structure of Right and Wrong\" (Academic Press 1993). Black broke still more fresh ground with a third major opus, \"Moral Time\" (Oxford University Press 2011), which presented a radically new general and testable theory of the causes of conflict. He authored a series of brilliant publications, including the \"The Manners and Customs of the Police\" (Academic Press 1981), \"Sociological Justice' (Oxford University Press 1993), \"The Geometry of Terrorism\" in Sociological Theory (2004), and \"The Epistemology of Pure Sociology\". ","He was a fellow of the American Society of Criminology and the American Anthropological Association. In 2013, he received the Law and Society Association Harry Kalven Jr. Prize for outstanding scholarship. He received several awards from the American Sociological Association (ASA) and its Sections. In 1994, he received both the ASA Theory Section's Theory Prize and the Section on the Sociology of Law's Distinguished Book Award, for \"The Social Structure of Right and Wrong\". He was also the recipient of the ASA Section on the Sociology of Law's Distinguished Article Award in 1997 for \"The Epistemology of Pure Sociology\" (Law \u0026 Social Inquiry 1995) and the recipient of the ASA Section on Altruism, Morality, and Social Solidarity inaugural Outstanding Published Book Award in 2012 for \"Moral Time\". In addition, several of his books have been translated into other languages.  He was invited to lecture in numerous countries abroad, including Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Holland, France, Scotland, England, Poland, and Japan. He was on the editorial board for scholarly journals and edited his own series on \"Studies on Law and Social Control\" for Oxford Press.","Black was also a charismatic teacher who influenced many students of sociology. According to Mark Cooney, \"His classes were an intellectual treat for he saw teaching as an opportunity to develop new ideas.\" Beyond the classroom, he was an inspiring mentor ready to offer advice and encouragement, especially to younger scholars. He retired from the University of Virginia in 2016 and died in January 2024.","The collection also includes the papers of Roberta Senechal de la Roche, (spouse of Donald Black) and an American historian, sociologist, retired professor from Washington and Lee University, and poet born in western Maine and raised in upstate New York. She graduated from the University of Southern Maine and the University of Virginia, where she received a doctoral degree in history.  As a historian and sociologist, she specialized in studying theory on collective violence and social history. Her first major publication, originally titled \"The Sociogenesis of a Race Riot\", was later renamed \"In Lincoln's Shadow: The Springfield Race Riot of 1908\". The book examines the two-day race riot in Springfield, Illinois, which resulted in the displacement of thousands of Black residents, destruction of their businesses and homes, and brutal killings of two African Americans. Her work won two distinguished prizes, cementing her contribution to the field. She taught courses on the American gilded age, the history of violence in America, the history of women in America, and a seminar on modern terrorism. ","Roberta was inspired by the sociological approach in \"Salem Possessed\", which used detailed social profiles to uncover community conflicts during the Salem Witch Trials. As a graduate student at the University of Virginia, she sought a similarly researchable topic in the field of collective violence. She chose the Springfield riot for its historical significance as Abraham Lincoln's hometown and its underexplored status in academic literature. Over eight years, she meticulously analyzed the dynamics of the riot, profiling both the perpetrators and victims and uncovering patterns that challenged prevailing social strain theories of violence. Her long standing interest is in non-state unilateral collective violence, such as rioting, lynching, terrorism, and vigilantism.","She is also a poet of Miꞌkmaq and French- Canadian descent. Her poems have appeared in the Colorado Review; Vallum; Glass: A Journal of Poetry; Yemassee, Blue Mountain Review, Sequestrum, and Cold Mountain Review, among others. She has two prize-winning chapbooks: Blind Flowers (Arcadia Press) and After Eden (Heartland Review Press, 2019). A third chapbook, Winter Light, and her first book, Going Fast (2019) are published by David Robert Books.","\nSources:\nCooney, Mark. \"Donald Black\" Member News \u0026 Notes. American Sociological Association, May 2024.\nhttps://www.asanet.org/member-news-notes-may-2024/#obituary","Roberta Senechal de la Roche's website.\nhttps://www.wlu.edu/profile/senechal-roberta"],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eMSS 15031, Donald Black papers, box number, folder number, Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library, University of Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["MSS 15031, Donald Black papers, box number, folder number, Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library, University of Virginia."],"processinfo_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Donald Black papers were received in increments over a period of years and have been interfiled except for the most recent additions which have been added as a series at the end.\u003c/p\u003e"],"processinfo_heading_ssm":["Processing Information"],"processinfo_tesim":["The Donald Black papers were received in increments over a period of years and have been interfiled except for the most recent additions which have been added as a series at the end."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection contains items from Donald Black's life and career, spanning from the 1930s up until 2023, ranging from personal memorabilia from his high school years, to his research in graduate school, to drafts of his major published works, to his professional involvement as a leader in sociology and professor at the University of Virginia, including forthright and meaningful correspondence with colleagues and adversaries about sociology theories from academic institutions across the world leading up to his retirement from the University of Virginia in 2016. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eHis papers include his academic writings, manuscripts, conference papers and lectures, course readings, examination questions, syllabi, correspondence with students and colleagues, personal journals, and notes about ground breaking theories that he created in the fields of sociology, law, and criminology. They reveal the passionate, intellectual and personal thought processes of a dedicated scholar and professor who led a new way of thinking about sociology as a scientific approach to understanding social conditions, particularly situations involving conflict, by creating a model that was designed to be testable and that veered away from psychology and the study of the individual.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eRoberta Senechal de la Roche papers are included in Subseries 5 of the collection. She was a full professor at Washington and Lee University where she taught sociology, history, and social history. Included are her articles, manuscripts, lectures, conference talks, correspondence with colleagues, and correspondence between her and Donald Black. Her published works of poetry have been catalogued separately.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Contents"],"scopecontent_tesim":["This collection contains items from Donald Black's life and career, spanning from the 1930s up until 2023, ranging from personal memorabilia from his high school years, to his research in graduate school, to drafts of his major published works, to his professional involvement as a leader in sociology and professor at the University of Virginia, including forthright and meaningful correspondence with colleagues and adversaries about sociology theories from academic institutions across the world leading up to his retirement from the University of Virginia in 2016. ","His papers include his academic writings, manuscripts, conference papers and lectures, course readings, examination questions, syllabi, correspondence with students and colleagues, personal journals, and notes about ground breaking theories that he created in the fields of sociology, law, and criminology. They reveal the passionate, intellectual and personal thought processes of a dedicated scholar and professor who led a new way of thinking about sociology as a scientific approach to understanding social conditions, particularly situations involving conflict, by creating a model that was designed to be testable and that veered away from psychology and the study of the individual.","Roberta Senechal de la Roche papers are included in Subseries 5 of the collection. She was a full professor at Washington and Lee University where she taught sociology, history, and social history. Included are her articles, manuscripts, lectures, conference talks, correspondence with colleagues, and correspondence between her and Donald Black. Her published works of poetry have been catalogued separately."],"separatedmaterial_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003ePrinted monographs and offprints in this collection have been catalogued and housed separately. Each catalogue record has the following local note: SPECIAL COLLECTIONS: Gift of Donald J. Black. From the Papers of Donald Black, MSS 15031.\u003c/p\u003e"],"separatedmaterial_heading_ssm":["Separated Materials"],"separatedmaterial_tesim":["Printed monographs and offprints in this collection have been catalogued and housed separately. Each catalogue record has the following local note: SPECIAL COLLECTIONS: Gift of Donald J. Black. From the Papers of Donald Black, MSS 15031."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use materials in the collection in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Conditions Governing Use"],"userestrict_tesim":["This collection is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use materials in the collection in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s)."],"names_ssim":["Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library","Black, Donald J., 1941-","Senechal de la Roche, Roberta, 1950-","Mileski, Maureen, 1944-","Baumgartner, M. P. (Baumgartner, Mary Pat), 1953-"],"corpname_ssim":["Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library"],"names_coll_ssim":["Black, Donald J., 1941-","Senechal de la Roche, Roberta, 1950-","Mileski, Maureen, 1944-","Baumgartner, M. P. (Baumgartner, Mary Pat), 1953-"],"persname_ssim":["Black, Donald J., 1941-","Senechal de la Roche, Roberta, 1950-","Mileski, Maureen, 1944-","Baumgartner, M. P. 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After apprenticing with advertising photographers, Berger established his own business, Duane Berger's Photography, in 1988. Mr. Berger served as the official RMC photographer from 2001-2017.","Some images and content in these materials depict prejudices not condoned by the College. These materials are presented as documentation of the historical record of the College and broader American history. Randolph-Macon College values a diverse and inclusive community that promotes student learning and transparency. ","For users preferring to avoid potentially offensive content, please contact archives@rmc.edu; we are happy to assist in locating specific materials. ","Inquiries may be directed to the Special Collections and Archives team by emailing archives@rmc.edu","This Collection is a series of CDs holding photos of Randolph-Macon college taken by Duane Berger.","A collection of professional photos of and relating to Randolph-Macon College taken by College photographer Duane Berger and stored on 384 CDs and DVDs.","Flavia Reed Owen Special Collections \u0026 Archives, McGraw-Page Library, Randolph-Macon College","English \n.    "],"unitid_tesim":["RMC.00011"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Duane Berger RMC Photograph Collection"],"collection_title_tesim":["Duane Berger RMC Photograph Collection"],"collection_ssim":["Duane Berger RMC Photograph Collection"],"repository_ssm":["Randolph-Macon College"],"repository_ssim":["Randolph-Macon College"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"extent_ssm":["7.2 Linear Feet"],"extent_tesim":["7.2 Linear Feet"],"date_range_isim":[2001,2002,2003,2004,2005,2006,2007,2008,2009,2010,2011,2012,2013,2014,2015,2016,2017],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eCollection is open for research; appointments to view materials can be scheduled via the appointment request form on the Special Collections and Archives webpage of the library website https://library.rmc.edu/specialcollections\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Conditions Governing Access"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["Collection is open for research; appointments to view materials can be scheduled via the appointment request form on the Special Collections and Archives webpage of the library website https://library.rmc.edu/specialcollections"],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eDuane Berger is a second-generation photographer whose passion for photography began at a young age while helping his father print photographs. After apprenticing with advertising photographers, Berger established his own business, Duane Berger's Photography, in 1988. Mr. Berger served as the official RMC photographer from 2001-2017.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical / Historical"],"bioghist_tesim":["Duane Berger is a second-generation photographer whose passion for photography began at a young age while helping his father print photographs. After apprenticing with advertising photographers, Berger established his own business, Duane Berger's Photography, in 1988. Mr. Berger served as the official RMC photographer from 2001-2017."],"odd_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSome images and content in these materials depict prejudices not condoned by the College. These materials are presented as documentation of the historical record of the College and broader American history. Randolph-Macon College values a diverse and inclusive community that promotes student learning and transparency. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eFor users preferring to avoid potentially offensive content, please contact archives@rmc.edu; we are happy to assist in locating specific materials. \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eInquiries may be directed to the Special Collections and Archives team by emailing archives@rmc.edu\u003c/p\u003e"],"odd_heading_ssm":["Content Disclaimer","Contact Information"],"odd_tesim":["Some images and content in these materials depict prejudices not condoned by the College. These materials are presented as documentation of the historical record of the College and broader American history. Randolph-Macon College values a diverse and inclusive community that promotes student learning and transparency. ","For users preferring to avoid potentially offensive content, please contact archives@rmc.edu; we are happy to assist in locating specific materials. ","Inquiries may be directed to the Special Collections and Archives team by emailing archives@rmc.edu"],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003e[item identification] Collection Name, Flavia Reed Owen Special Collections and Archives, McGraw-Page Library, Randolph-Macon College, Ashland, VA\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["[item identification] Collection Name, Flavia Reed Owen Special Collections and Archives, McGraw-Page Library, Randolph-Macon College, Ashland, VA"],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis Collection is a series of CDs holding photos of Randolph-Macon college taken by Duane Berger.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Contents"],"scopecontent_tesim":["This Collection is a series of CDs holding photos of Randolph-Macon college taken by Duane Berger."],"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract id=\"aspace_13decaf32f1191ee5d7aecadfbd3f289\"\u003eA collection of professional photos of and relating to Randolph-Macon College taken by College photographer Duane Berger and stored on 384 CDs and DVDs.\u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["A collection of professional photos of and relating to Randolph-Macon College taken by College photographer Duane Berger and stored on 384 CDs and DVDs."],"names_ssim":["Flavia Reed Owen Special Collections \u0026 Archives, McGraw-Page Library, Randolph-Macon College"],"corpname_ssim":["Flavia Reed Owen Special Collections \u0026 Archives, McGraw-Page Library, Randolph-Macon College"],"language_ssim":["English \n.    "],"total_component_count_is":391,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-13T20:04:06.096Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viasr_repositories_2_resources_14_c06_c05"}},{"id":"viu_repositories_7_resources_842_c02_c03_c19","type":"Fonds","attributes":{"title":"Vision and Partnership for the Twenty-first Century","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_repositories_7_resources_842_c02_c03_c19#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_repositories_7_resources_842_c02_c03_c19","ref_ssm":["viu_repositories_7_resources_842_c02_c03_c19"],"id":"viu_repositories_7_resources_842_c02_c03_c19","ead_ssi":"viu_repositories_7_resources_842","_root_":"viu_repositories_7_resources_842","_nest_parent_":"viu_repositories_7_resources_842_c02_c03","parent_ssi":"viu_repositories_7_resources_842_c02_c03","parent_ssim":["viu_repositories_7_resources_842","viu_repositories_7_resources_842_c02","viu_repositories_7_resources_842_c02_c03"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_repositories_7_resources_842","viu_repositories_7_resources_842_c02","viu_repositories_7_resources_842_c02_c03"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Don Eugene Detmer papers","Series II: Speeches and talks by Don Eugene Detmer","1988-1990"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Don Eugene Detmer papers","Series II: Speeches and talks by Don Eugene Detmer","1988-1990"],"text":["Don Eugene Detmer papers","Series II: Speeches and talks by Don Eugene Detmer","1988-1990","Vision and Partnership for the Twenty-first Century","box 3","folder 42"],"title_filing_ssi":"Vision and Partnership for the Twenty-first Century","title_ssm":["Vision and Partnership for the Twenty-first Century"],"title_tesim":["Vision and Partnership for the Twenty-first Century"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1990-04"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1990"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Vision and Partnership for the Twenty-first Century"],"component_level_isim":[3],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Don Eugene Detmer papers"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Fonds"],"level_ssim":["Fonds"],"sort_isi":48,"date_range_isim":[1990],"containers_ssim":["box 3","folder 42"],"_nest_path_":"/components#1/components#2/components#18","timestamp":"2026-04-30T22:40:51.662Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_repositories_7_resources_842","ead_ssi":"viu_repositories_7_resources_842","_root_":"viu_repositories_7_resources_842","_nest_parent_":"viu_repositories_7_resources_842","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/oai/UVA/repositories_7_resources_842.xml","aspace_url_ssi":"https://archives.lib.virginia.edu/ark:/59853/747","title_ssm":["Don Eugene Detmer papers"],"title_tesim":["Don Eugene Detmer papers"],"unitdate_ssm":["1924-2025, bulk 1973-2003"],"unitdate_inclusive_ssm":["1924-2025, bulk 1973-2003"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["MS-79","Archival Resource Key","/repositories/7/resources/842"],"text":["MS-79","Archival Resource Key","/repositories/7/resources/842","Don Eugene Detmer papers","Virginia--Charlottesville","Medical Records","University of Virginia","University of Virginia--Health System","University of Wisconsin-Madison","University of Utah","Surgery","Medical informatics","Medical informatics--Law and legislation","Health services administration","Electronic data processing documentation","Medical libraries","The materials are in good condition.","\nDon Eugene Detmer was born in Kansas in 1939. He studied at the University of Kansas and the University of Durham in Durham, England before earning his MD in June 1965 from the University of Kansas. He also received an MA from the University of Cambridge in 2002. His postgraduate medical training was done at Johns Hopkins Hospital (1965-1967) and at the Duke University Medical Center under Dr. David Sabiston, Jr. from 1969 to 1972. He spent a year from 1972-1973 at the Institute of Medicine, National Academies in Washington DC. His military service was as a clinical associate, Surgery Branch at the National Heart Institute at the National Institutes of Health from 1967-1969 and as a surgeon with the U.S. Public Health Service from 1972-1973.\n","\nDr. Detmer served a joint appointment in preventative medicine and surgery at the University of Wisconsin-Madison where he was assistant professor (1973-1977), associate professor (1977-1980), and professor (1980-1984). In 1984, he joined the University of Utah, serving as Vice President for Health Sciences and professor of surgery and medical informatics until 1988. Dr. Detmer was instrumental in developing the University of Utah's Integrated Academic/Advanced Information Systems (IAIMIS). \n","\n\nIn 1988, he came to the University of Virginia where he was the Vice President for Health Sciences, a professor in the department of surgery, and a professor of business administration at the Darden School. From 1992-1999, Dr. Detmer was co-director of the Virginia Health Policy Center. From 1993-1996, he was Vice-President and Provost for Health Sciences at the University, as well as a professor of health policy and a professor of surgery. From 1996-1998, he was the Senior Vice President at the University, also lecturing as a professor in health policy, health sciences policy, surgery, and health evaluation sciences until 1999. \n","\n\nFrom 1999-2004, Dr. Detmer was the Dennis Gillings Professor of Health Management at Cambridge University and is a lifetime member of Clare Hall College, Cambridge. From 2005-2015, he was a visiting professor at the Centre for Health Informatics and Multi-professional Education, University College London.\n","\n\nDr. Detmer's professional activities include working with the American Medical Informatics Association, the China Medical Board of New York, the Friends of the National Library of Medicine, the Institute of Medicine, the American Association of Medical Colleges, and the Nuffield Trust.  He additionally served as the Chair of the Board of Regents at the National Library of Medicine, the Chair of the Board on Health Care Services at the IOM/NAM, and like Kerr White and John Ashley before him, as Chair of the National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics. His professional affiliations, memberships, honors and awards were many. He served on editorial boards; advisory groups in the US and the UK; on government boards and committees; and as a consultant to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services; the U.S. Congress; to the states of New York, Virginia, and Wisconsin; and to various universities and foundations. He is a frequent visiting lecturer, both national and internationally. His bibliography has nearly 200 entries and includes articles related to surgery, health policy, physician assistants, computer-based patient records, physician workforce, medical informatics, quality of health care, and the academic health center. \n","\n\nHe was married to Mary Helen McFerson (1939-2018) and has two daughters. In October 2024, he married Sharon Hauff.\n","In the weeding process duplicates of reprints and speeches were discarded. Bills, receipts, and personal financial information documents were shredded. Several documents were moved to UVA Medical Center records. Most of the correspondence, speeches, talks, chapter articles, and reprints were organized by date into bulky notebooks. The order was retained but the notebooks were discarded. The resultant collections size was thereby reduced to approximately two-thirds of the orginal in terms of linear feet.","This process was repeated in 2024 when the collection was reprocessed to include new accessioned materials and previous additions to the collection that were donated during the COVID-19 pandemic.","See also: Office of the Vice President for Health Affairs records, RG-17-5; University of Virginia School of Medicine records (RG-17-1); and the Mary Helen Detmer journal (MSS 16372) found in UVA's Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library.","The Don Eugene Detmer papers contain speeches, reprints, policy documents, committee meeting records, articles, correspondence, editorials, and born-digital materials that relate to the professional life of Don Eugene Detmer. Materials particularly document Dr. Detmer's work during 1973-2004 working at the Department of Surgery at the University of Wisconsin, the Department of Surgery and the Department of Medical Informatics at the University of Utah, the University of Virginia, and the University of Cambridge. Other materials relate to the Institute of Medicine, the UVA Health System, the American Medical Informatics Association, the China Medical Board of New York, the Friends of the National Library of Medicine, the American Association of Medical Colleges, and the Nuffield Trust.","Claude Moore Health Sciences Library","Detmer, Don Eugene","English"],"unitid_tesim":["MS-79","Archival Resource Key","/repositories/7/resources/842"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Don Eugene Detmer papers"],"collection_title_tesim":["Don Eugene Detmer papers"],"collection_ssim":["Don Eugene Detmer papers"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"geogname_ssm":["Virginia--Charlottesville","Medical Records"],"geogname_ssim":["Virginia--Charlottesville","Medical Records"],"creator_ssm":["Detmer, Don Eugene"],"creator_ssim":["Detmer, Don Eugene"],"creator_persname_ssim":["Detmer, Don Eugene"],"creators_ssim":["Detmer, Don Eugene"],"places_ssim":["Virginia--Charlottesville","Medical Records"],"access_subjects_ssim":["University of Virginia","University of Virginia--Health System","University of Wisconsin-Madison","University of Utah","Surgery","Medical informatics","Medical informatics--Law and legislation","Health services administration","Electronic data processing documentation","Medical libraries"],"access_subjects_ssm":["University of Virginia","University of Virginia--Health System","University of Wisconsin-Madison","University of Utah","Surgery","Medical informatics","Medical informatics--Law and legislation","Health services administration","Electronic data processing documentation","Medical libraries"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["The materials are in good condition."],"extent_ssm":["31 Linear Feet Boxes 1-9 are from the first accession. Boxes 10-31 were processed together from three separate accessions donated between 2017-2024."],"extent_tesim":["31 Linear Feet Boxes 1-9 are from the first accession. Boxes 10-31 were processed together from three separate accessions donated between 2017-2024."],"date_range_isim":[1924,1925,1926,1927,1928,1929,1930,1931,1932,1933,1934,1935,1936,1937,1938,1939,1940,1941,1942,1943,1944,1945,1946,1947,1948,1949,1950,1951,1952,1953,1954,1955,1956,1957,1958,1959,1960,1961,1962,1963,1964,1965,1966,1967,1968,1969,1970,1971,1972,1973,1974,1975,1976,1977,1978,1979,1980,1981,1982,1983,1984,1985,1986,1987,1988,1989,1990,1991,1992,1993,1994,1995,1996,1997,1998,1999,2000,2001,2002,2003,2004,2005,2006,2007,2008,2009,2010,2011,2012,2013,2014,2015,2016,2017,2018,2019,2020,2021,2022,2023,2024,2025],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003e\nDon Eugene Detmer was born in Kansas in 1939. He studied at the University of Kansas and the University of Durham in Durham, England before earning his MD in June 1965 from the University of Kansas. He also received an MA from the University of Cambridge in 2002. His postgraduate medical training was done at Johns Hopkins Hospital (1965-1967) and at the Duke University Medical Center under Dr. David Sabiston, Jr. from 1969 to 1972. He spent a year from 1972-1973 at the Institute of Medicine, National Academies in Washington DC. His military service was as a clinical associate, Surgery Branch at the National Heart Institute at the National Institutes of Health from 1967-1969 and as a surgeon with the U.S. Public Health Service from 1972-1973.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nDr. Detmer served a joint appointment in preventative medicine and surgery at the University of Wisconsin-Madison where he was assistant professor (1973-1977), associate professor (1977-1980), and professor (1980-1984). In 1984, he joined the University of Utah, serving as Vice President for Health Sciences and professor of surgery and medical informatics until 1988. Dr. Detmer was instrumental in developing the University of Utah's Integrated Academic/Advanced Information Systems (IAIMIS). \n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\n\nIn 1988, he came to the University of Virginia where he was the Vice President for Health Sciences, a professor in the department of surgery, and a professor of business administration at the Darden School. From 1992-1999, Dr. Detmer was co-director of the Virginia Health Policy Center. From 1993-1996, he was Vice-President and Provost for Health Sciences at the University, as well as a professor of health policy and a professor of surgery. From 1996-1998, he was the Senior Vice President at the University, also lecturing as a professor in health policy, health sciences policy, surgery, and health evaluation sciences until 1999. \n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\n\nFrom 1999-2004, Dr. Detmer was the Dennis Gillings Professor of Health Management at Cambridge University and is a lifetime member of Clare Hall College, Cambridge. From 2005-2015, he was a visiting professor at the Centre for Health Informatics and Multi-professional Education, University College London.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\n\nDr. Detmer's professional activities include working with the American Medical Informatics Association, the China Medical Board of New York, the Friends of the National Library of Medicine, the Institute of Medicine, the American Association of Medical Colleges, and the Nuffield Trust.  He additionally served as the Chair of the Board of Regents at the National Library of Medicine, the Chair of the Board on Health Care Services at the IOM/NAM, and like Kerr White and John Ashley before him, as Chair of the National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics. His professional affiliations, memberships, honors and awards were many. He served on editorial boards; advisory groups in the US and the UK; on government boards and committees; and as a consultant to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services; the U.S. Congress; to the states of New York, Virginia, and Wisconsin; and to various universities and foundations. He is a frequent visiting lecturer, both national and internationally. His bibliography has nearly 200 entries and includes articles related to surgery, health policy, physician assistants, computer-based patient records, physician workforce, medical informatics, quality of health care, and the academic health center. \n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\n\nHe was married to Mary Helen McFerson (1939-2018) and has two daughters. In October 2024, he married Sharon Hauff.\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical / Historical"],"bioghist_tesim":["\nDon Eugene Detmer was born in Kansas in 1939. He studied at the University of Kansas and the University of Durham in Durham, England before earning his MD in June 1965 from the University of Kansas. He also received an MA from the University of Cambridge in 2002. His postgraduate medical training was done at Johns Hopkins Hospital (1965-1967) and at the Duke University Medical Center under Dr. David Sabiston, Jr. from 1969 to 1972. He spent a year from 1972-1973 at the Institute of Medicine, National Academies in Washington DC. His military service was as a clinical associate, Surgery Branch at the National Heart Institute at the National Institutes of Health from 1967-1969 and as a surgeon with the U.S. Public Health Service from 1972-1973.\n","\nDr. Detmer served a joint appointment in preventative medicine and surgery at the University of Wisconsin-Madison where he was assistant professor (1973-1977), associate professor (1977-1980), and professor (1980-1984). In 1984, he joined the University of Utah, serving as Vice President for Health Sciences and professor of surgery and medical informatics until 1988. Dr. Detmer was instrumental in developing the University of Utah's Integrated Academic/Advanced Information Systems (IAIMIS). \n","\n\nIn 1988, he came to the University of Virginia where he was the Vice President for Health Sciences, a professor in the department of surgery, and a professor of business administration at the Darden School. From 1992-1999, Dr. Detmer was co-director of the Virginia Health Policy Center. From 1993-1996, he was Vice-President and Provost for Health Sciences at the University, as well as a professor of health policy and a professor of surgery. From 1996-1998, he was the Senior Vice President at the University, also lecturing as a professor in health policy, health sciences policy, surgery, and health evaluation sciences until 1999. \n","\n\nFrom 1999-2004, Dr. Detmer was the Dennis Gillings Professor of Health Management at Cambridge University and is a lifetime member of Clare Hall College, Cambridge. From 2005-2015, he was a visiting professor at the Centre for Health Informatics and Multi-professional Education, University College London.\n","\n\nDr. Detmer's professional activities include working with the American Medical Informatics Association, the China Medical Board of New York, the Friends of the National Library of Medicine, the Institute of Medicine, the American Association of Medical Colleges, and the Nuffield Trust.  He additionally served as the Chair of the Board of Regents at the National Library of Medicine, the Chair of the Board on Health Care Services at the IOM/NAM, and like Kerr White and John Ashley before him, as Chair of the National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics. His professional affiliations, memberships, honors and awards were many. He served on editorial boards; advisory groups in the US and the UK; on government boards and committees; and as a consultant to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services; the U.S. Congress; to the states of New York, Virginia, and Wisconsin; and to various universities and foundations. He is a frequent visiting lecturer, both national and internationally. His bibliography has nearly 200 entries and includes articles related to surgery, health policy, physician assistants, computer-based patient records, physician workforce, medical informatics, quality of health care, and the academic health center. \n","\n\nHe was married to Mary Helen McFerson (1939-2018) and has two daughters. In October 2024, he married Sharon Hauff.\n"],"processinfo_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eIn the weeding process duplicates of reprints and speeches were discarded. Bills, receipts, and personal financial information documents were shredded. Several documents were moved to UVA Medical Center records. Most of the correspondence, speeches, talks, chapter articles, and reprints were organized by date into bulky notebooks. The order was retained but the notebooks were discarded. The resultant collections size was thereby reduced to approximately two-thirds of the orginal in terms of linear feet.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis process was repeated in 2024 when the collection was reprocessed to include new accessioned materials and previous additions to the collection that were donated during the COVID-19 pandemic.\u003c/p\u003e"],"processinfo_heading_ssm":["Processing Information"],"processinfo_tesim":["In the weeding process duplicates of reprints and speeches were discarded. Bills, receipts, and personal financial information documents were shredded. Several documents were moved to UVA Medical Center records. Most of the correspondence, speeches, talks, chapter articles, and reprints were organized by date into bulky notebooks. The order was retained but the notebooks were discarded. The resultant collections size was thereby reduced to approximately two-thirds of the orginal in terms of linear feet.","This process was repeated in 2024 when the collection was reprocessed to include new accessioned materials and previous additions to the collection that were donated during the COVID-19 pandemic."],"relatedmaterial_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSee also: Office of the Vice President for Health Affairs records, RG-17-5; University of Virginia School of Medicine records (RG-17-1); and the Mary Helen Detmer journal (MSS 16372) found in UVA's Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library.\u003c/p\u003e"],"relatedmaterial_heading_ssm":["Related Materials"],"relatedmaterial_tesim":["See also: Office of the Vice President for Health Affairs records, RG-17-5; University of Virginia School of Medicine records (RG-17-1); and the Mary Helen Detmer journal (MSS 16372) found in UVA's Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Don Eugene Detmer papers contain speeches, reprints, policy documents, committee meeting records, articles, correspondence, editorials, and born-digital materials that relate to the professional life of Don Eugene Detmer. Materials particularly document Dr. Detmer's work during 1973-2004 working at the Department of Surgery at the University of Wisconsin, the Department of Surgery and the Department of Medical Informatics at the University of Utah, the University of Virginia, and the University of Cambridge. Other materials relate to the Institute of Medicine, the UVA Health System, the American Medical Informatics Association, the China Medical Board of New York, the Friends of the National Library of Medicine, the American Association of Medical Colleges, and the Nuffield Trust.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Contents"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The Don Eugene Detmer papers contain speeches, reprints, policy documents, committee meeting records, articles, correspondence, editorials, and born-digital materials that relate to the professional life of Don Eugene Detmer. Materials particularly document Dr. Detmer's work during 1973-2004 working at the Department of Surgery at the University of Wisconsin, the Department of Surgery and the Department of Medical Informatics at the University of Utah, the University of Virginia, and the University of Cambridge. Other materials relate to the Institute of Medicine, the UVA Health System, the American Medical Informatics Association, the China Medical Board of New York, the Friends of the National Library of Medicine, the American Association of Medical Colleges, and the Nuffield Trust."],"names_ssim":["Claude Moore Health Sciences Library","Detmer, Don Eugene"],"corpname_ssim":["Claude Moore Health Sciences Library"],"persname_ssim":["Detmer, Don Eugene"],"language_ssim":["English"],"descrules_ssm":["Describing Archives: A Content Standard"],"total_component_count_is":422,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-04-30T22:40:51.662Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_repositories_7_resources_842_c02_c03_c19"}},{"id":"viu_repositories_3_resources_1765_c03_c52","type":"Fonds","attributes":{"title":"\"Warts\" publicity in periodical","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_repositories_3_resources_1765_c03_c52#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_repositories_3_resources_1765_c03_c52","ref_ssm":["viu_repositories_3_resources_1765_c03_c52"],"id":"viu_repositories_3_resources_1765_c03_c52","ead_ssi":"viu_repositories_3_resources_1765","_root_":"viu_repositories_3_resources_1765","_nest_parent_":"viu_repositories_3_resources_1765_c03","parent_ssi":"viu_repositories_3_resources_1765_c03","parent_ssim":["viu_repositories_3_resources_1765","viu_repositories_3_resources_1765_c03"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_repositories_3_resources_1765","viu_repositories_3_resources_1765_c03"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Susan Richards Shreve papers","Series 3. Book Files (correspondence and specific reviews related to her books)"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Susan Richards Shreve papers","Series 3. Book Files (correspondence and specific reviews related to her books)"],"text":["Susan Richards Shreve papers","Series 3. Book Files (correspondence and specific reviews related to her books)","\"Warts\" publicity in periodical","box 20","folder 4"],"title_filing_ssi":"\"Warts\" publicity in periodical","title_ssm":["\"Warts\" publicity in periodical"],"title_tesim":["\"Warts\" publicity in periodical"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1996"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1996"],"normalized_title_ssm":["\"Warts\" publicity in periodical"],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Susan Richards Shreve papers"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Fonds"],"level_ssim":["Fonds"],"sort_isi":115,"parent_access_restrict_tesm":["The collection is open for research use. There are book contracts that need to be reviewed before access.","Some digital files may have information protected under FERPA and need to be reviewed by an archivist. Access to born-digital files must be made in advance. Please contact Special Collections via our online Reference Request form, https://small.library.virginia.edu/services/reference-request, to request access to these materials. Please be aware that additional actions may be required to make these items available. Items will be evaluated on a case-by-case basis before access can be made. Depending on the size of the request, making them available may take some time. "],"date_range_isim":[1996],"containers_ssim":["box 20","folder 4"],"_nest_path_":"/components#2/components#51","timestamp":"2026-04-30T22:49:01.163Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_repositories_3_resources_1765","ead_ssi":"viu_repositories_3_resources_1765","_root_":"viu_repositories_3_resources_1765","_nest_parent_":"viu_repositories_3_resources_1765","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/oai/UVA/repositories_3_resources_1765.xml","aspace_url_ssi":"https://archives.lib.virginia.edu/ark:/59853/216579","title_filing_ssi":"Shreve, Susan, Richards, papers","title_ssm":["Susan Richards Shreve papers"],"title_tesim":["Susan Richards Shreve papers"],"unitdate_ssm":["1969-2020"],"unitdate_inclusive_ssm":["1969-2020"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["MSS 16887","Archival Resource Key","/repositories/3/resources/1765"],"text":["MSS 16887","Archival Resource Key","/repositories/3/resources/1765","Susan Richards Shreve papers","Authors and publishers","Children's books","Families fiction","The collection is open for research use. There are book contracts that need to be reviewed before access.","Some digital files may have information protected under FERPA and need to be reviewed by an archivist. Access to born-digital files must be made in advance. Please contact Special Collections via our online Reference Request form, https://small.library.virginia.edu/services/reference-request, to request access to these materials. Please be aware that additional actions may be required to make these items available. Items will be evaluated on a case-by-case basis before access can be made. Depending on the size of the request, making them available may take some time. ","The collection is arranged into 10 series. Series 1. Manuscripts and notebooks, Series 2. Typescripts, Series 3. Bookfiles, Series 4. Essays, Articles, and Newspaper clippings, Series 5. Correspondence, Series 6. Contracts (need review for access), Series 7. Teaching, Series 8. PEN/Faulkner and other organizations, Series 9. Personal and miscellaneous, Series 10. Schedule Planners, and notebooks.","Books are organized alphabetically by title. Correspondence is arranged alphabetically for some correspondents B-W and chronologically for general correspondence. This arrangement follows the original order of Susan Richards Shreve's files. Periodicals contain ads and reviews of her books and have been placed in the bookfiles by title of her books.","Susan Richards Shreve is a prominent writer and English professor of creative writing who founded cultural, literary, and arts foundations and school writing programs. Her work is embedded into myriad aspects of American literary culture,providing deep insights to the American literary scene at the end of the 20th and beginning of the 21st century. She was born in 1939, in Toledo, OH., the daughter of Robert Kenneth Richards (1913-1969), a journalist and Government censor during WWII, and Helen Elizabeth Richards. She received her B.A.(magna cum laude), at the University of Pennsylvania, 1961; and her M.A., at the University of Virginia, 1969. She published her first book, A Fortunate Madness (1974), which marked the beginning of a consistently productive and successful publishing career as the author of both children's literature and adult fiction novels.","Shreve has been a significant participant in the Washington D.C. literary community for more than 40 years,combining her role as a writer with several literary occupations, including co-founder of the Master of Fine Arts Program in Writing at George Mason University (1980), and as co-founder, President, and Chairman of\nthe PEN/Faulkner Foundation, one of the leading literary foundations in the United States. At PEN/Faulkner she created the Writers in Schools program in 1989, which brings published authors and their books into urban schools. ","She has also been a Jenny Moore Fellow at George Washington\nUniversity, a visiting writer at Princeton University, the School of the Arts of Columbia University,Bennington College Summer Seminars, and Goucher College.","Further, her marriage (1987) to the literary agent Timothy Seldes (1927-2015), brought her even deeper into the American literary community. Seldes owned and led the venerable agency Russell \u0026 Volkening for 40 years, where his clients included Annie Dillard, Nadine Gordimer, James Lehrer, Peter Taylor, Barbara\nTuchman, Anne Tyler, and Eudora Welty. ","Shreve's son, Porter Shreve is also a novelist and a writing professor, and the two have co-published two anthologies,\nOutside the Law: Narratives on Justice in America (1997) and\nHow We Want to Live: Narratives (1998).","\nAs a very young child, Susan Shreve contracted polio and had a two year stay at Warm Springs, GA., (1950-1952), a hospital established by Franklin D. Roosevelt for polio rehabilitation. Shreve describes her experience in an autobiographical memoir, Warm Springs: Traces Of A Childhood At FDR's Polio Haven. In an earlier work of fiction, The Lovely Shoes (2011), Shreve writes that when she was 11 years old, her mother contacted the Italian fashion designer and shoemaker Salvatore Ferragamo requesting custom made shoes that would allow her daughter to walk and dance and\notherwise participate in life in a normal manner. Ferragamo agreed, and produced custom made shoes for Shreve for years.","Her novel, A Country Of Strangers, about a Black and White family living on the same farm was under option for film, and Daughters Of The New World was an NBC mini series under the title A Will Of Their Own. Shreve was often a guest on the MacNeil Lehrer Newshour on PBS.","\nHonors and awards include:","Jenny McKean Moore Award, George Washington University, 1978; ","Notable Book citation, American Library Association (ALA), 1979, for\nFamily Secrets: Five Very Important Stories; ","Notable Children's Trade Book in the Field of Social Studies, National Council for Social Studies and the Children's Book Council joint committee, 1980, for Family Secrets: Five Very Important Stories; ","Best Book for Young Adults citation, ALA, 1980, for\nThe Masquerade; ","PEN/Faulkner writers award.","Guggenheim Fellowship grant in fiction, 1980; ","National Endowment for the Arts fiction award, 1982; ","Grub Street Award in Non-Fiction","Edgar Allan Poe Award, Mystery Writers of America, 1988, for\nLucy Forever and Miss Rosetree, Shrinks for Best Juvenile Novel. ","Woodrow Wilson fellowships, West Virginia Wesleyan, 1994, and Bates College, 1997;","Lila Wallace Readers Digest Foundation grant.","Alumni Award at the Sidwell Friends School","Writers for Writers Award from Poets and Writers","Sources:\nGerald W. Cloud\nRare Books • Manuscripts • Archives ","Susan Richards Shreve. Wikipedia. Accessed 5/30/25","Related collection: University of Virginia Collection of the History of Childhood, parenting, and family building MSS 16758.","This collection contains the papers of Susan Richard Shreve (b. 1939), a prominent American author, a professor of Creative Writing at George Mason University and a co-founder of the PEN/Faulkner Foundation (1985) for which she served as a board member and chairman. ","The collection documents her literary and teaching career with manuscripts, typescripts, proofs, journals, correspondence, contracts, clippings, digital files, and other materials related to her authorship and teaching. ","Shreve has published fifteen novels, including a memoir \"Warm Springs: Traces of a Childhood.\" She has also published thirty books for children, and edited and co-edited five anthologies spanning from 1974-2019. Her writing is described as having \"snap and verve\" (New York Times) and marks a significant contribution to the genre. As an author of children's books, Shreve has been described as a \"master of subtle and wise perception\" (Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books). Her writing in general has consistently taken on a broad range of controversial topics, including political ideology (Children of Power, 1979, which tackles McCarthyism and responses to it), terrorism (Plum and Jaggers, 2000); disability (The Lovely Shoes, 2011) and Warm Springs, 2008); perceptions of racial identity (Glimmer, 1997, as \"Annie Waters\"); suicide, old age, and divorce (Family Secrets, 1979); and unwed parenthood (Loveletters, 1978, a book which was suppressed by its own publisher amid a controversy between writers, reviewers, and educators, with a subsequent debate in the press that Loveletters should be banned in schools). Her books are page-turners with rich character descriptions often likened to Charles Dickens, and filled with dramatic events.\n ","The bulk of the collection represents her writings, including notebooks with manuscript drafts of many of her works and typescripts, many with annotations, including original versions of novels and stories with alternate titles and unpublished works  including I Can Touch an Autumn Morning, Wooden And Wicker, In The Center Ring, The Unadoptables, and Geography Of A Marriage.","\nAlso included are book files which are(organized alphabetically by title) and consist of correspondence, clippings, reviews, promotional material, and ephemera such as dustjackets. ","The correspondence includes letters from Shreve's agent, publisher, and editor as well as readers, writers,faculty, other literary agents, journalists, and Washington D.C. residents associated with publishing, writing, and PEN/Faulkner. There are combined personal and professional letters as the author kept these together in her life.  There are notable letters from Nicolas Delbanco,Richard Ford, John Irving, Edward P. Jones, Gordon Lish, Joyce Carol Oates, Tim O'Brien, Nan Talese, and Anne Tyler.","Also of interest is correspondence with Edward P. Jones when he was a student at the University of Virginia and having doubts about his writing career while studying for an education. There is also a draft of an article by Shreve in regard to the work of Amiri Bakara who received a PEN/Faulkner award. Shreve often included African American and LBGT perspectives in her writing. ","The collection includes the business side of literary work as there are more than sixty contracts as well as printed articles and newspaper clippings. The contracts have limited access due to containing personal information.","There are also address books with entries from dozens of writers, editors, publishers, including Saul Bellow, Donald Bartheleme, John Irving, Bernard Malamud, Arthur Miller, Toni Morrison, Joyce Carol Oates, Tim O'Brien, Walker Percy, Eudora Welty, etc. and many others.","The Digital files comprise  911 files. These include a combination of files from her professional writing and teaching career between 2000 and 2020. These files represent a wide range of works, including manuscripts of published and unpublished books and professional writings associated with her novels, her teaching, and her role in the literary community. ","Sources:\nGerald W. Cloud\nRare Books • Manuscripts • Archives ","Susan Richards Shreve. Wikipedia. Accessed 5/30/25","Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library","Shreve, Susan","English"],"unitid_tesim":["MSS 16887","Archival Resource Key","/repositories/3/resources/1765"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Susan Richards Shreve papers"],"collection_title_tesim":["Susan Richards Shreve papers"],"collection_ssim":["Susan Richards Shreve papers"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"creator_ssm":["Shreve, Susan"],"creator_ssim":["Shreve, Susan"],"creator_persname_ssim":["Shreve, Susan"],"creators_ssim":["Shreve, Susan"],"access_subjects_ssim":["Authors and publishers","Children's books","Families fiction"],"access_subjects_ssm":["Authors and publishers","Children's books","Families fiction"],"has_online_content_ssim":["true"],"extent_ssm":["12 Cubic Feet 29 legal size document boxes (15.25 x 10.25 x 5), one half-size legal box, and one oversize box, and digital files","0.34 Gigabytes 911 files"],"extent_tesim":["12 Cubic Feet 29 legal size document boxes (15.25 x 10.25 x 5), one half-size legal box, and one oversize box, and digital files","0.34 Gigabytes 911 files"],"date_range_isim":[1969,1970,1971,1972,1973,1974,1975,1976,1977,1978,1979,1980,1981,1982,1983,1984,1985,1986,1987,1988,1989,1990,1991,1992,1993,1994,1995,1996,1997,1998,1999,2000,2001,2002,2003,2004,2005,2006,2007,2008,2009,2010,2011,2012,2013,2014,2015,2016,2017,2018,2019,2020],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe collection is open for research use. There are book contracts that need to be reviewed before access.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSome digital files may have information protected under FERPA and need to be reviewed by an archivist. Access to born-digital files must be made in advance. Please contact Special Collections via our online Reference Request form, https://small.library.virginia.edu/services/reference-request, to request access to these materials. Please be aware that additional actions may be required to make these items available. Items will be evaluated on a case-by-case basis before access can be made. Depending on the size of the request, making them available may take some time. \u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Conditions Governing Access"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["The collection is open for research use. There are book contracts that need to be reviewed before access.","Some digital files may have information protected under FERPA and need to be reviewed by an archivist. Access to born-digital files must be made in advance. Please contact Special Collections via our online Reference Request form, https://small.library.virginia.edu/services/reference-request, to request access to these materials. Please be aware that additional actions may be required to make these items available. Items will be evaluated on a case-by-case basis before access can be made. Depending on the size of the request, making them available may take some time. "],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe collection is arranged into 10 series. Series 1. Manuscripts and notebooks, Series 2. Typescripts, Series 3. Bookfiles, Series 4. Essays, Articles, and Newspaper clippings, Series 5. Correspondence, Series 6. Contracts (need review for access), Series 7. Teaching, Series 8. PEN/Faulkner and other organizations, Series 9. Personal and miscellaneous, Series 10. Schedule Planners, and notebooks.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBooks are organized alphabetically by title. Correspondence is arranged alphabetically for some correspondents B-W and chronologically for general correspondence. This arrangement follows the original order of Susan Richards Shreve's files. Periodicals contain ads and reviews of her books and have been placed in the bookfiles by title of her books.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement"],"arrangement_tesim":["The collection is arranged into 10 series. Series 1. Manuscripts and notebooks, Series 2. Typescripts, Series 3. Bookfiles, Series 4. Essays, Articles, and Newspaper clippings, Series 5. Correspondence, Series 6. Contracts (need review for access), Series 7. Teaching, Series 8. PEN/Faulkner and other organizations, Series 9. Personal and miscellaneous, Series 10. Schedule Planners, and notebooks.","Books are organized alphabetically by title. Correspondence is arranged alphabetically for some correspondents B-W and chronologically for general correspondence. This arrangement follows the original order of Susan Richards Shreve's files. Periodicals contain ads and reviews of her books and have been placed in the bookfiles by title of her books."],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSusan Richards Shreve is a prominent writer and English professor of creative writing who founded cultural, literary, and arts foundations and school writing programs. Her work is embedded into myriad aspects of American literary culture,providing deep insights to the American literary scene at the end of the 20th and beginning of the 21st century. She was born in 1939, in Toledo, OH., the daughter of Robert Kenneth Richards (1913-1969), a journalist and Government censor during WWII, and Helen Elizabeth Richards. She received her B.A.(magna cum laude), at the University of Pennsylvania, 1961; and her M.A., at the University of Virginia, 1969. She published her first book, A Fortunate Madness (1974), which marked the beginning of a consistently productive and successful publishing career as the author of both children's literature and adult fiction novels.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eShreve has been a significant participant in the Washington D.C. literary community for more than 40 years,combining her role as a writer with several literary occupations, including co-founder of the Master of Fine Arts Program in Writing at George Mason University (1980), and as co-founder, President, and Chairman of\nthe PEN/Faulkner Foundation, one of the leading literary foundations in the United States. At PEN/Faulkner she created the Writers in Schools program in 1989, which brings published authors and their books into urban schools. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eShe has also been a Jenny Moore Fellow at George Washington\nUniversity, a visiting writer at Princeton University, the School of the Arts of Columbia University,Bennington College Summer Seminars, and Goucher College.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eFurther, her marriage (1987) to the literary agent Timothy Seldes (1927-2015), brought her even deeper into the American literary community. Seldes owned and led the venerable agency Russell \u0026amp; Volkening for 40 years, where his clients included Annie Dillard, Nadine Gordimer, James Lehrer, Peter Taylor, Barbara\nTuchman, Anne Tyler, and Eudora Welty. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eShreve's son, Porter Shreve is also a novelist and a writing professor, and the two have co-published two anthologies,\nOutside the Law: Narratives on Justice in America (1997) and\nHow We Want to Live: Narratives (1998).\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e\nAs a very young child, Susan Shreve contracted polio and had a two year stay at Warm Springs, GA., (1950-1952), a hospital established by Franklin D. Roosevelt for polio rehabilitation. Shreve describes her experience in an autobiographical memoir, Warm Springs: Traces Of A Childhood At FDR's Polio Haven. In an earlier work of fiction, The Lovely Shoes (2011), Shreve writes that when she was 11 years old, her mother contacted the Italian fashion designer and shoemaker Salvatore Ferragamo requesting custom made shoes that would allow her daughter to walk and dance and\notherwise participate in life in a normal manner. Ferragamo agreed, and produced custom made shoes for Shreve for years.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eHer novel, A Country Of Strangers, about a Black and White family living on the same farm was under option for film, and Daughters Of The New World was an NBC mini series under the title A Will Of Their Own. Shreve was often a guest on the MacNeil Lehrer Newshour on PBS.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e\nHonors and awards include:\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eJenny McKean Moore Award, George Washington University, 1978; \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eNotable Book citation, American Library Association (ALA), 1979, for\nFamily Secrets: Five Very Important Stories; \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eNotable Children's Trade Book in the Field of Social Studies, National Council for Social Studies and the Children's Book Council joint committee, 1980, for Family Secrets: Five Very Important Stories; \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBest Book for Young Adults citation, ALA, 1980, for\nThe Masquerade; \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003ePEN/Faulkner writers award.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eGuggenheim Fellowship grant in fiction, 1980; \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eNational Endowment for the Arts fiction award, 1982; \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eGrub Street Award in Non-Fiction\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eEdgar Allan Poe Award, Mystery Writers of America, 1988, for\nLucy Forever and Miss Rosetree, Shrinks for Best Juvenile Novel. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eWoodrow Wilson fellowships, West Virginia Wesleyan, 1994, and Bates College, 1997;\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eLila Wallace Readers Digest Foundation grant.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eAlumni Award at the Sidwell Friends School\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eWriters for Writers Award from Poets and Writers\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSources:\nGerald W. Cloud\nRare Books • Manuscripts • Archives \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSusan Richards Shreve. Wikipedia. Accessed 5/30/25\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical / Historical"],"bioghist_tesim":["Susan Richards Shreve is a prominent writer and English professor of creative writing who founded cultural, literary, and arts foundations and school writing programs. Her work is embedded into myriad aspects of American literary culture,providing deep insights to the American literary scene at the end of the 20th and beginning of the 21st century. She was born in 1939, in Toledo, OH., the daughter of Robert Kenneth Richards (1913-1969), a journalist and Government censor during WWII, and Helen Elizabeth Richards. She received her B.A.(magna cum laude), at the University of Pennsylvania, 1961; and her M.A., at the University of Virginia, 1969. She published her first book, A Fortunate Madness (1974), which marked the beginning of a consistently productive and successful publishing career as the author of both children's literature and adult fiction novels.","Shreve has been a significant participant in the Washington D.C. literary community for more than 40 years,combining her role as a writer with several literary occupations, including co-founder of the Master of Fine Arts Program in Writing at George Mason University (1980), and as co-founder, President, and Chairman of\nthe PEN/Faulkner Foundation, one of the leading literary foundations in the United States. At PEN/Faulkner she created the Writers in Schools program in 1989, which brings published authors and their books into urban schools. ","She has also been a Jenny Moore Fellow at George Washington\nUniversity, a visiting writer at Princeton University, the School of the Arts of Columbia University,Bennington College Summer Seminars, and Goucher College.","Further, her marriage (1987) to the literary agent Timothy Seldes (1927-2015), brought her even deeper into the American literary community. Seldes owned and led the venerable agency Russell \u0026 Volkening for 40 years, where his clients included Annie Dillard, Nadine Gordimer, James Lehrer, Peter Taylor, Barbara\nTuchman, Anne Tyler, and Eudora Welty. ","Shreve's son, Porter Shreve is also a novelist and a writing professor, and the two have co-published two anthologies,\nOutside the Law: Narratives on Justice in America (1997) and\nHow We Want to Live: Narratives (1998).","\nAs a very young child, Susan Shreve contracted polio and had a two year stay at Warm Springs, GA., (1950-1952), a hospital established by Franklin D. Roosevelt for polio rehabilitation. Shreve describes her experience in an autobiographical memoir, Warm Springs: Traces Of A Childhood At FDR's Polio Haven. In an earlier work of fiction, The Lovely Shoes (2011), Shreve writes that when she was 11 years old, her mother contacted the Italian fashion designer and shoemaker Salvatore Ferragamo requesting custom made shoes that would allow her daughter to walk and dance and\notherwise participate in life in a normal manner. Ferragamo agreed, and produced custom made shoes for Shreve for years.","Her novel, A Country Of Strangers, about a Black and White family living on the same farm was under option for film, and Daughters Of The New World was an NBC mini series under the title A Will Of Their Own. Shreve was often a guest on the MacNeil Lehrer Newshour on PBS.","\nHonors and awards include:","Jenny McKean Moore Award, George Washington University, 1978; ","Notable Book citation, American Library Association (ALA), 1979, for\nFamily Secrets: Five Very Important Stories; ","Notable Children's Trade Book in the Field of Social Studies, National Council for Social Studies and the Children's Book Council joint committee, 1980, for Family Secrets: Five Very Important Stories; ","Best Book for Young Adults citation, ALA, 1980, for\nThe Masquerade; ","PEN/Faulkner writers award.","Guggenheim Fellowship grant in fiction, 1980; ","National Endowment for the Arts fiction award, 1982; ","Grub Street Award in Non-Fiction","Edgar Allan Poe Award, Mystery Writers of America, 1988, for\nLucy Forever and Miss Rosetree, Shrinks for Best Juvenile Novel. ","Woodrow Wilson fellowships, West Virginia Wesleyan, 1994, and Bates College, 1997;","Lila Wallace Readers Digest Foundation grant.","Alumni Award at the Sidwell Friends School","Writers for Writers Award from Poets and Writers","Sources:\nGerald W. Cloud\nRare Books • Manuscripts • Archives ","Susan Richards Shreve. Wikipedia. Accessed 5/30/25"],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eMSS 16887, Susan Richards Shreve papers, Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library, University of Virginia Library.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["MSS 16887, Susan Richards Shreve papers, Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library, University of Virginia Library."],"relatedmaterial_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eRelated collection: University of Virginia Collection of the History of Childhood, parenting, and family building MSS 16758.\u003c/p\u003e"],"relatedmaterial_heading_ssm":["Related Materials"],"relatedmaterial_tesim":["Related collection: University of Virginia Collection of the History of Childhood, parenting, and family building MSS 16758."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection contains the papers of Susan Richard Shreve (b. 1939), a prominent American author, a professor of Creative Writing at George Mason University and a co-founder of the PEN/Faulkner Foundation (1985) for which she served as a board member and chairman. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eThe collection documents her literary and teaching career with manuscripts, typescripts, proofs, journals, correspondence, contracts, clippings, digital files, and other materials related to her authorship and teaching. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eShreve has published fifteen novels, including a memoir \"Warm Springs: Traces of a Childhood.\" She has also published thirty books for children, and edited and co-edited five anthologies spanning from 1974-2019. Her writing is described as having \"snap and verve\" (New York Times) and marks a significant contribution to the genre. As an author of children's books, Shreve has been described as a \"master of subtle and wise perception\" (Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books). Her writing in general has consistently taken on a broad range of controversial topics, including political ideology (Children of Power, 1979, which tackles McCarthyism and responses to it), terrorism (Plum and Jaggers, 2000); disability (The Lovely Shoes, 2011) and Warm Springs, 2008); perceptions of racial identity (Glimmer, 1997, as \"Annie Waters\"); suicide, old age, and divorce (Family Secrets, 1979); and unwed parenthood (Loveletters, 1978, a book which was suppressed by its own publisher amid a controversy between writers, reviewers, and educators, with a subsequent debate in the press that Loveletters should be banned in schools). Her books are page-turners with rich character descriptions often likened to Charles Dickens, and filled with dramatic events.\n \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eThe bulk of the collection represents her writings, including notebooks with manuscript drafts of many of her works and typescripts, many with annotations, including original versions of novels and stories with alternate titles and unpublished works  including I Can Touch an Autumn Morning, Wooden And Wicker, In The Center Ring, The Unadoptables, and Geography Of A Marriage.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e\nAlso included are book files which are(organized alphabetically by title) and consist of correspondence, clippings, reviews, promotional material, and ephemera such as dustjackets. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eThe correspondence includes letters from Shreve's agent, publisher, and editor as well as readers, writers,faculty, other literary agents, journalists, and Washington D.C. residents associated with publishing, writing, and PEN/Faulkner. There are combined personal and professional letters as the author kept these together in her life.  There are notable letters from Nicolas Delbanco,Richard Ford, John Irving, Edward P. Jones, Gordon Lish, Joyce Carol Oates, Tim O'Brien, Nan Talese, and Anne Tyler.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eAlso of interest is correspondence with Edward P. Jones when he was a student at the University of Virginia and having doubts about his writing career while studying for an education. There is also a draft of an article by Shreve in regard to the work of Amiri Bakara who received a PEN/Faulkner award. Shreve often included African American and LBGT perspectives in her writing. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eThe collection includes the business side of literary work as there are more than sixty contracts as well as printed articles and newspaper clippings. The contracts have limited access due to containing personal information.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eThere are also address books with entries from dozens of writers, editors, publishers, including Saul Bellow, Donald Bartheleme, John Irving, Bernard Malamud, Arthur Miller, Toni Morrison, Joyce Carol Oates, Tim O'Brien, Walker Percy, Eudora Welty, etc. and many others.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eThe Digital files comprise  911 files. These include a combination of files from her professional writing and teaching career between 2000 and 2020. These files represent a wide range of works, including manuscripts of published and unpublished books and professional writings associated with her novels, her teaching, and her role in the literary community. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSources:\nGerald W. Cloud\nRare Books • Manuscripts • Archives \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSusan Richards Shreve. Wikipedia. Accessed 5/30/25\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Content Description"],"scopecontent_tesim":["This collection contains the papers of Susan Richard Shreve (b. 1939), a prominent American author, a professor of Creative Writing at George Mason University and a co-founder of the PEN/Faulkner Foundation (1985) for which she served as a board member and chairman. ","The collection documents her literary and teaching career with manuscripts, typescripts, proofs, journals, correspondence, contracts, clippings, digital files, and other materials related to her authorship and teaching. ","Shreve has published fifteen novels, including a memoir \"Warm Springs: Traces of a Childhood.\" She has also published thirty books for children, and edited and co-edited five anthologies spanning from 1974-2019. Her writing is described as having \"snap and verve\" (New York Times) and marks a significant contribution to the genre. As an author of children's books, Shreve has been described as a \"master of subtle and wise perception\" (Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books). Her writing in general has consistently taken on a broad range of controversial topics, including political ideology (Children of Power, 1979, which tackles McCarthyism and responses to it), terrorism (Plum and Jaggers, 2000); disability (The Lovely Shoes, 2011) and Warm Springs, 2008); perceptions of racial identity (Glimmer, 1997, as \"Annie Waters\"); suicide, old age, and divorce (Family Secrets, 1979); and unwed parenthood (Loveletters, 1978, a book which was suppressed by its own publisher amid a controversy between writers, reviewers, and educators, with a subsequent debate in the press that Loveletters should be banned in schools). Her books are page-turners with rich character descriptions often likened to Charles Dickens, and filled with dramatic events.\n ","The bulk of the collection represents her writings, including notebooks with manuscript drafts of many of her works and typescripts, many with annotations, including original versions of novels and stories with alternate titles and unpublished works  including I Can Touch an Autumn Morning, Wooden And Wicker, In The Center Ring, The Unadoptables, and Geography Of A Marriage.","\nAlso included are book files which are(organized alphabetically by title) and consist of correspondence, clippings, reviews, promotional material, and ephemera such as dustjackets. ","The correspondence includes letters from Shreve's agent, publisher, and editor as well as readers, writers,faculty, other literary agents, journalists, and Washington D.C. residents associated with publishing, writing, and PEN/Faulkner. There are combined personal and professional letters as the author kept these together in her life.  There are notable letters from Nicolas Delbanco,Richard Ford, John Irving, Edward P. Jones, Gordon Lish, Joyce Carol Oates, Tim O'Brien, Nan Talese, and Anne Tyler.","Also of interest is correspondence with Edward P. Jones when he was a student at the University of Virginia and having doubts about his writing career while studying for an education. There is also a draft of an article by Shreve in regard to the work of Amiri Bakara who received a PEN/Faulkner award. Shreve often included African American and LBGT perspectives in her writing. ","The collection includes the business side of literary work as there are more than sixty contracts as well as printed articles and newspaper clippings. The contracts have limited access due to containing personal information.","There are also address books with entries from dozens of writers, editors, publishers, including Saul Bellow, Donald Bartheleme, John Irving, Bernard Malamud, Arthur Miller, Toni Morrison, Joyce Carol Oates, Tim O'Brien, Walker Percy, Eudora Welty, etc. and many others.","The Digital files comprise  911 files. These include a combination of files from her professional writing and teaching career between 2000 and 2020. These files represent a wide range of works, including manuscripts of published and unpublished books and professional writings associated with her novels, her teaching, and her role in the literary community. ","Sources:\nGerald W. Cloud\nRare Books • Manuscripts • Archives ","Susan Richards Shreve. Wikipedia. Accessed 5/30/25"],"names_ssim":["Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library","Shreve, Susan"],"corpname_ssim":["Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library"],"persname_ssim":["Shreve, Susan"],"language_ssim":["English"],"descrules_ssm":["Describing Archives: A Content Standard"],"total_component_count_is":227,"online_item_count_is":7,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-04-30T22:49:01.163Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_repositories_3_resources_1765_c03_c52"}}],"included":[{"type":"facet","id":"repository_ssim","attributes":{"label":"Repository","items":[{"attributes":{"label":"College of William and Mary","value":"College of William and Mary","hits":87},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Fonds\u0026f%5Brepository%5D%5B%5D=College+of+William+and+Mary\u0026view=compact"}},{"attributes":{"label":"George Mason University","value":"George Mason University","hits":4},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Fonds\u0026f%5Brepository%5D%5B%5D=George+Mason+University\u0026view=compact"}},{"attributes":{"label":"Library of Virginia","value":"Library of Virginia","hits":6},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Fonds\u0026f%5Brepository%5D%5B%5D=Library+of+Virginia\u0026view=compact"}},{"attributes":{"label":"Longwood University","value":"Longwood University","hits":1},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Fonds\u0026f%5Brepository%5D%5B%5D=Longwood+University\u0026view=compact"}},{"attributes":{"label":"Randolph-Macon College","value":"Randolph-Macon College","hits":2},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Fonds\u0026f%5Brepository%5D%5B%5D=Randolph-Macon+College\u0026view=compact"}},{"attributes":{"label":"The George Washington Presidential Library at Mount Vernon","value":"The George Washington Presidential Library at Mount Vernon","hits":1},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Fonds\u0026f%5Brepository%5D%5B%5D=The+George+Washington+Presidential+Library+at+Mount+Vernon\u0026view=compact"}},{"attributes":{"label":"University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept.","value":"University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept.","hits":51},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Fonds\u0026f%5Brepository%5D%5B%5D=University+of+Virginia%2C+Special+Collections+Dept.\u0026view=compact"}},{"attributes":{"label":"West Virginia and Regional History Center","value":"West Virginia and Regional History Center","hits":12},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Fonds\u0026f%5Brepository%5D%5B%5D=West+Virginia+and+Regional+History+Center\u0026view=compact"}}]},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/facet/repository_ssim.json?f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Fonds\u0026view=compact"}},{"type":"facet","id":"collection_ssim","attributes":{"label":"Collection","items":[{"attributes":{"label":"A. 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