User:Swetarpatel93/sandbox

The Ethnographic Video for Instruction and Analysis (EVIA) Digital Archive Project is a collaborative project which aims to create a digital registry of ethnographic field video for use by instructors and scholars. It is a collection of digitized, unedited videos which represent ethnographic research and its corresponding scholarly documentation. Collections gathered by EVIA Project include a diverse range of traditions from around the world.

Project Overview
The EVIA Digital Archive Project central purpose is to create a repository of ethnographic video and an framework of tools and systems to support librarians, archivists, and scholars in ethnographic instruction. EVIA Project specifically focuses on topics such as anthropology, dance ethnology ethnomusicology, and folklore. The primary mission of EVIA Project is preservation of ethnographic videos which were created by scholars while conducting their research. The secondary goal is to make the content generated available with descriptive annotations, creating a distinct scholars, instructors, and students.

History
Funding for the Ethnographic Video for Instruction and Analysis (EVIA) Digital Archive Project began in 2001 by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and contributions from Indiana University and University of Michigan. It was originally conceived as the “Ethnomusicological Video for Instruction and Analysis Digital Archive”, but moved towards a broader ethnographic center which altered the meaning of its acronym. In 2001, the first formal efforts of Digital Archive Project were in their initial planning phases. Team members which included ethnomusicologists, intellectual property specialists, and digital and video technologists from Indiana University, the University of Michigan, Harvard University, and Ohio State University were all involved in planning workshops trying to resolve issues such as geographic coverage, technical challenges, and ethical issues surrounding the Project. At the end of the year, team members presented their proposal to the Mellon Foundation and succeeded in receiving funding

Archival Storage
EVIA Project utilizes both physical and digital storage systems. EVIA Project operates out of the Archives of Traditional Music at Indiana University, one of the oldest and largest university-based ethnographic sound archives in the United States. Physical tapes, whether they are a Digital Betacam preservation master or the original, are maintained in a temperature and humidity-controlled vault of the Archives of Traditional Music. They are catalogued just as

Digital files, whether they are the original recordings or preservation transfers from the original, are stored in Indiana University's Mass Data Storage System (MDSS). They are governed as a partnership between the Archives of Traditional Music, The EVIA Project, and the Digital Library Program at Indiana University. Any metadata gathered about the recordings as part of the EVIA deposition undertakings are maintained in a FEDORA archive generated by EVIA Project and maintained as part of the Digital Library Program at Indiana.