Archives for the Future : Global Perspectives on Audiovisual Archives in
the 21 Century/edited by Anthony Seeger and Shubha Chaudhuri. Calcutta,
Seagull, 2004, xxviii, 300 p., $30 (includes registered airmail postage.
Delivery within 10-15 days). $33. ISBN 81-7046-223-1.
Contents: Introduction. I. Workshops and recommendations: 1. Archives and the future. 2. Technology for the future/Dietrich Schuller. 3. Rights, intellectual property and archives today. II. Archives in industrializing countries at the dawn of the millennium--papers and proposals: 1. Audiovisual archives in Ghana/Maxwell Agyei Addo. 2. The music archives at the CIDMUC and their influence on the musical culture of Cuba/Olavo Alen Rodnguez. 3. How do you turn an house into an archive? Air conditioning and tape storage in a hot and humid environment/Shubha Chaudhuri. 4. A call for an international archival network (IAN)/Ali Ibrahim al-Daw. 5. Listening to the Andes/Victor Alexander Huerta-Mercado Tenorio. 6. Challenges to a small ethnographic archive/Grace Koch. 7. The sound archive at the district six museum: a work in progress/Valmont Layne. 8. Reclaiming the past: the value of recordings to a national cultural heritage/Don Niles. 9. The challenge of developing a cultural audiovisual archive in Indonesia/Endo Suanda. 10. University of Philippines centre for ethnomusicology/Marialita Tamanio-Yraola. 11. Archives of collected materials of folk and traditional music: the case of Vietnam/To Ngoc Thanh. 12. Documenting Nepalese musical traditions/Gert-Matthias Wegner. 13. Archiving Chinese music materials at the Chinese University of Hong Kong/J. Lawrence Witzleben with Tsui Ying-Fai. Appendix: 1. Final workshop documents. 2. The first debate: archivists versus administrators. 3. Debate between performers, researchers and archivists. Bibliography.
"This unique book is based on a workshop for an international group of administrators of research-based archives held near New Delhi in December 1999, the aim of which was to bring together archivists from industrializing countries which have a relatively recent history of audiovisual archives, principally from the southern hemisphere; to take concerns of audiovisual archives outside the national and regional boundaries that so often define them; and to focus on audiovisual archives that document musical and folklore traditions or ethnomusicology.
Pooling the experience of participants from Austria, Australia, China, Cuba, Ghana, India, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, Peru, The Philippines, South Africa, Sudan, and the United States, the volume will be of interest to cultural workers both as an introductory textbook in ethnomusicology courses and as a book for specialists.
The book begins with a theoretical introduction, including general observations on archives, a discussion of the principal points in the participant papers, a description of the workshop itself, and how the process of the workshop has been transformed into this volume. Section one deals with archive structure and operations, including a chapter on recording technology which begins with a paper by the world-renowned expert in technology for audio-visual archives, Dr. Dietrich Schuller, Director of the Vienna Phonogramm-Archiv, Austria, the oldest such archive in the world; and one on issues of copyright and ethics by Grace Koch. Section two consists of the participants' papers. The volume also includes useful material such as sample agreement forms, a bibliography of major resources on audiovisual archives, and a website list of the most important professional organizations and archive sites." (jacket)