Citation Styles2012

download Citation Styles2012

of 4

Transcript of Citation Styles2012

  • 8/18/2019 Citation Styles2012

    1/4

     Citation Guide 

    General presentation:•  Download the Critical Theory cover sheet from webcourses, fill-in and attach to front of essay

    before submitting.•  Essays should be printed on A4 paper, stapled in the corner and placed in a single vinyl pocket. Do

    not place individual pages in separate sleeves.• 

    The typeface should be legible and generally not less than 11pt. Margins should be no less than20mm. The typescript should be in double or 1.5 spacing, except for indented quotations (seebelow) or footnotes, where single spacing should be used.

    •  Pages should be numbered consecutively.

    Images:•  All images should be big enough to see clearly and numbered and captioned. In essays, captions

    should give the source of images, referenced following ‘footnote’ conventions below. In theses,sources are given in the list of illustrations (see Thesis Guidelines).

    •  All images should be discussed in the text. If you are not going to discuss them, don’t include them – they’re just distracting.

    • 

    Please refer to each image by figure number and/or name in the text when you are discussing it, sowe know to look for it.•   We recommend having images on separate pages at the end of the essay.

    Quotations:•  Brief quotations should be set in double inverted commas: e.g. “It was a revealing example of

     traditional industrial patronage”.•  Quotations of more than three lines should be indented and typed single space, without quotation

    marks.•  Single inverted commas are used for quotations within quotations. E.g. As Rick Poyner notes, his

    work on Ray Gun “[…] left Carson fully open to Heller’s accusation that he was the leader of a ‘Cultof the Ugly’ originally founded at Cranbrook.”

     

     Words added to a quotation for clarification by the author should be set in square brackets:“The first observable effect of this event [the 1925 Paris Exhibition] was upon the furniture trade,which has not yet recovered from this injection of decorative inspiration.”

    •   Words left out should be indicated by […]

    Citation styles for commonly used types of sources.The following information shows you how to cite in the text (as a footnote) and in the bibliography asource that you have used. For more information on what, when and why to reference see “What is anessay?” on webcourses.

    Fundamental information:•  The bibliography is arranged alphabetically by author or by first editor’s surname.

    • 

    Titles of books and journals are always in italics.•  Titles of “articles” and “chapters” are always in inverted commas.•  The bibliography is divided into sections: Published Sources (books, articles, newspapers, etc);

    Unpublished Sources (unpublished interviews, personal communications, conference papers,dissertations, etc); Web Sources (internet material).

    Citing in text – footnotes•  The referencing system used by Critical Theory in DIT is called the Chicago Style. There are several

    ways of referencing quotes and other information in your text: we use footnotes. These are so calledbecause they are notes that go at the bottom or “foot” of the page.

    •  To insert a footnote in Microsoft Word, go to the “Insert” menu and select “footnote”. This willautomatically insert a superscript number at the selected point in the text and open a new line at the

    bottom of the page where you can type the full details of your citation.•  To save time and space, the second and subsequent references from the same source may be

    abbreviated following the style outlined below.

  • 8/18/2019 Citation Styles2012

    2/4

     Citation Guide 

    Citing a book:Elements required:•  Author (surname and initials or first names); Title of publication (in italics); Edition, (only if other

     than the first); Place of publication; Publisher; Series title and volume number if any; Year ofpublication;

    One author:Footnote (first reference to source):1. Michael Pollan, The Omnivore’s Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals (New York: Penguin,2006), 99–100.

    Footnote (second and subsequent reference to source):18. Pollan, Omnivore’s Dilemma, 3.

    Bibliography:Pollan, Michael. The Omnivore’s Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals. New York: Penguin,2006.

    Two or more authors: (note order of names)Footnote:1. Newton N. Minow and Craig L. LaMay, Inside the Presidential Debates: Their Improbable Pastand Promising Future (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2008), 24–25.

    Footnote (shortened):8. Minow and LaMay, Presidential Debates, 138.

    Bibliography:Minow, Newton N., and Craig L. LaMay. Inside the Presidential Debates: Their Improbable Past andPromising Future. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2008.

    A book with an editor in place of an author uses the abbreviation ed. (editor ; for more than one editor,

    use eds.). (Note that the shortened form does not include ed.)Footnote:1. Joel Greenberg, ed., Of Prairie, Woods, and Water: Two Centuries of Chicago Nature Writing  (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2008), 42.Footnote (shortened):33. Greenberg, Of Prairie, Woods, and Water , 326–27.

    Bibliography: Greenberg, Joel, ed. Of Prairie, Woods, and Water: Two Centuries of Chicago Nature Writing .Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2008.

     Where no individual author or editor is listed, as is the case in some exhibition catalogues, the entry is

    listed under the name of the sponsoring institution.

    Citing an article or chapter in an edited bookElements required:•  Chapter author; Chapter title; Editor of book; Page numbers of the article; Place of publication;

    Publisher; Date of publication. Precede the title of the book with “in”Footnote:1. Sarah Wilson, “From Monuments to Fast Cars: Aspects of Cold War Art, 1946-1957,” in ColdWar Modern: Design 1945-1970, ed David Crowley and Jane Pavitt (London: V&A, 2008), 28.Footnote (shortened):19. Wilson, “From Monuments to Fast Cars,” 32.Bibliography:

     Wilson, Sarah. “From Monuments to Fast Cars: Aspects of Cold War Art, 1946-1957.” In ColdWar Modern: Design 1945-1970, edited by David Crowley and Jane Pavitt, 26-32. London: V&A,2008.

  • 8/18/2019 Citation Styles2012

    3/4

     Citation Guide 

    Citing a journal articleElements required•  Author; Year of publication; Title of article (in quotation marks); Title of journal (in italics); Issue

    Information (volume, part, number, month or season); Page reference

    Footnote:89. Walter Blair, “Americanized Comic Braggarts,” Critical Inquiry  4, no. 2 (1977), 331–32.Footnote (shortened):111. Blair, “Americanized Comic Braggarts,” 335.

    Bibliography:Blair, Walter. “Americanized Comic Braggarts.” Critical Inquiry  4, no. 2 (1977), 331–49.

    Citing a web site or an internet page (original content, rather than electronic journal articles)References, especially for quotes, should usually be to a specific web page, rather than to a website.

    Note that there is no shortened version. (For citation guidance on other types of electronic resource,please ask your tutor or consult: http://www.chicagomanualofstyle.org/home.html)Elements required!  Author of the content (if any); Title or a description of the page (in inverted commas); Owner or

    sponsor of the site; URL; Publication date or date of revision or modification; Access date

    Footnote:14. “WD2000: Visual Basic Macro to Assign Clipboard Text to a String Variable,” revision 1.3,Microsoft Help and Support, last modified November 23, 2006,http://support.microsoft.com/kb/212730. Accessed July 17, 2008.

    Bibliography:

    Microsoft Corporation. “WD2000: Visual Basic Macro to Assign Clipboard Text to a StringVariable.” Revision 1.3. Microsoft Help and Support. Last modified November 23, 2006.http://support.microsoft.com/kb/212730. Accessed July 17, 2008.

    Citing a DVD/Film/TV programme: Individual scenes or chapters are treated like book chapters andcited by title or by number. Bonus material on a DVD, such as critical commentary, is cited by authorand title.

    Footnote TV show:7. Michael Curtis and Gregory S. Malins, “The One with the Princess Leia Fantasy,” Friends,season 3, episode 1, directed by Gail Mancuso, aired September 19, 1996 (Burbank, CA: Warner Home Video, 2003), DVD.

    Footnote Film on DVD:8. “Crop Duster Attack,” North by Northwest , directed by Alfred Hitchcock (1959; Burbank, CA: Warner Home Video, 2000), DVD.

    Bibliography Bonus Material on DVD:Cleese, John, Terry Gilliam, Eric Idle, Terry Jones, and Michael Palin. “Commentaries.” Disc 2. Monty Python and the Holy Grail, special ed. DVD. Directed by Terry Gilliam and Terry Jones.Culver City, CA: Columbia Tristar Home Entertainment, 2001.

  • 8/18/2019 Citation Styles2012

    4/4

     Citation Guide 

    Citing a newspaper articleElements required!  Author; Year of publication; Title of article or headline; Title of newspaper (in italics); Day and

    month; (if online include url)Footnote:1. Editorial, The Irish Times, July 30, 1990.2. Robert Hughes “Le Corbusier: Paradise Now” The Guardian, March 20. 2006.http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/2006/mar/20/architecture.modernism1 Bibliography:Borzi, Pat. “Retirement Discussion Begins Anew for Favre.” New York Times, January 25, 2010.http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/26/sports/football/26vikings.html?emc=eta1.

    !  If no author given:Footnote:1.“In Texas, Ad Heats Up Race for Governor,” New York Times, July 30, 2002.Bibliography:

    New York Times. “In Texas, Ad Heats Up Race for Governor.” July 30, 2002.

    Interviews: PublishedAn interview that has already been published is treated like an article in a periodical or a chapter in abook. An interview that has been broadcast should be treated like other broadcast material. Interviewsconsulted online should be treated as other web-based material.

    Interviews: UnpublishedCitations should include the names of both the person interviewed and the interviewer; brief identifyinginformation, if appropriate; the place or date of the interview (or both, if known); and, if a transcript orrecording is available, where it may be found (such as in Appendices).

    Footnote:

    7. Andrew Macmillan (PRO Institute of Advertisers in Ireland), interview with the author, Dublin,September 22, 2011. (See Appendix A for transcript).8. Benjamin Spock, interview by Milton J. E. Senn, November 20, 1974, interview 67A, transcript,Senn Oral History Collection, National Library of Medicine, Bethesda, MD.

    Footnote (short form):9. Macmillan, interview. 

    Unpublished lectures, conference papers, etc.Citations should include as much information as possible to facilitate a reader to locate the original text.

    Footnote:2. Juliet Ash, “Untruthful Source: Prisoners’ writings, official and reform documentation as

    contradictory evidence of the design of iconic Prison Clothing in Britain, 1880-1930” (paperpresented at the Annual Conference of the Design History Society, University of Hertfordshire,September 9, 2009).

    Bibliography:Ash, Juliet. “Untruthful Source: Prisoners’ writings, official and reform documentation ascontradictory evidence of the design of iconic prison clothing in Britain, 1880-1930”. Paperpresented at the Annual Conference of the Design History Society, University of Hertfordshire,September 9, 2009.

    Adapted from:The Chicago Manual of Style 16th edition text © 2010 by The University of Chicago.The Chicago Manual of Style Online © 2006, 2007, 2010 by The University of Chicago.