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Updated February 2008
Indicating the relevant reference in the text
A number in brackets, eg. (1), or in superscript, eg. 2, placed in the text
of the essay, indicates the relevant reference. Citations are numbered sequentially throughout the text and each citation corresponds to a numbered note containing publication information about the source cited. The notes generally serve two purposes: to cite sources and to make cross-references to previous notes. Phrases used to introduce cited material are called signal phrases. These phrases usually come before quotations.
Here is an example of this kind of referencing :
The corresponding footnotes or endnotes have the following format :
Note that an author's name is presented in full if known, with given name or initials before surname. All significant words in the title and subtitle are capitalised, as are the first and last words of each. Publication details for a book are enclosed in parentheses. Commas are used to separate the main elements of the citation.
Titles of books and journals are italicised or underlined if hand-written, while title of chapters, titled parts of a book, or titles of journal articles are enclosed in quotation marks.
3. John Conrad and James W. Merritt, "Variant Specific Epitopes of Giardia Lamblia", Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology 42, no. 1 (1990): 125-132.
Three or more authors
For works having more than three authors, a note citation should give the
name of the first-listed author followed by et al. or and
others.
Chapter contained within another work
4. H.J. Oliver, "Lawson and Furphy", In The Literature of Australia, ed. Geoffrey Dutton,
288-305 (Ringwood, Vic.: Penguin, 1964).
Newspaper Articles
References to items in newspapers must include the date, month (often
abbreviated) and year. The name of the section should be included, if
given.
5. Marian Wilkinson, "Life After the Lodge", The Weekend Australian, 30-31 July 1994, Focus section.
Scriptural works
A citation to a scriptural work does not include page numbers and is
usually confined to a text reference in brackets.
...(Heb. 13.8 New English Bible)...
or details are given in a note,
6. 2 Kings 11.8 Revised Standard Version.
Entry in an encyclopaedia
When referring to a well-known alphabetically arranged work such as an
encyclopaedia, cite the title, edition if not the first, then the letters s.v followed by the term or phrase consulted (s.v. stands for sub verso, 'under the word').
These items are not then listed in a bibliography or a works cited list.
7. New Encyclopaedia Britannica, 15th ed., s.v. "fungi".
The footnotes (or endnotes) shown above are all examples of the first citation of work. Notes for subsequent citations of the same work can be abbreviated.
Example :
If you are citing more than one work by the same author it is necessary to include the work's title (or a shortened form of it) with the author's name in repeat citations. For example, subsequent citations to Northrop Fryes' Anatomy of Criticism: Four Essays and Myth and Metaphor: Selected Essays, 1974-1988 would be cited as:
This way of citing later references is now more common than using the Latin abbreviations op.cit. (for previously cited works) or ibid. (for a repeat of the preceding reference).
Note : A shortened reference may be used for the first appearance of an item if that item is to be cited in full in a bibliography or works cited list.
Example:
The corresponding note would be:
Citations for e-books should follow the format of the examples below:
13. Len Bass, Paul Clements, and Rick Kazman. Software Architecture in Practice, 2nd ed. (Reading, MA: Addison Wesley, 2003), Safari e-book.
Appropriate notes should follow this format:
With lengthy works such as dissertations and theses, it is customary to include a bibliography as well as the works cited list. Whether or not a bibliography is included depends on the intended scope of the work and on the system of referencing used.
The most usual arrangement for a bibliography or list is a single sequence in alphabetical order by author, with the author's surname before the initials or given name. Where an item has no author(s) it is usual to cite it by its title and to file it in the bibliography or works cited list in sequence by the first significant word of the title. Titles of books or journals should be italicised or underlined if hand-written. Capitalisation practice should be consistent.
A long list or bibliography may be divided into different sequences, either according to type of materials (e.g. books and articles listed separately) or according to subject category.
The main differences, as compared to presenting the reference in a note, are that the first author's family name is placed before the given name or initials, the main elements of the reference are separated by full stops, and publication details for books are not enclosed in brackets.
The following examples demonstrate the format for a variety of types of references. Included are some examples of citing electronic documents. Such items come in many forms, so only some examples have been listed here.
Standard format
| Author/editor. Title: Subtitle. (in italics or underlined if hand-written) Edition. (if not the first). Place of publication: Publisher, Year. |
Single author
Boyle, Jimmy. The Pain of Confinement: Prison Diaries. Edinburgh: Canongate, 1984.
Anthology or compilation (an edited book)
West, T. G., ed. and trans. Symbolism: An Anthology. London: Methuen, 1980.
Two or more books by the same author
Pilger, John. Distant Voices. London: Vintage, 1992.
- - - . A Secret Country. London: Cape, 1989.
Multivolume work
Summerfield, Geoffrey. Voices: An Anthology of Poetry and Pictures. 3 vols. London: Penguin, 1968.
Later edition
Newcomb, Horace, ed. Television: The Critical View. 6th ed. New York: Oxford UP, 2000.
Chaucer, Geoffrey. The Works of Geoffrey Chaucer. Ed. F. N. Robinson. 2nd ed. London: Oxford UP, 1957.
More than one author
Savage-Rumbaugh, Sue, Stuart G. Shanker and Talbot J. Taylor. Apes, Language and the Human Mind. New York: Oxford UP, 1998.
Dollimore, Johnathon, and Keith Hall, ed. Political Shakespeare: Essays in Cultural Materialism. 2nd ed. Ithaca: Cornell UP, 1994.
Three or more authors
If there are more than three authors or editors you should list all of the authors
in the bibliography or list of works cited.
MacIntosh, Angus, M.L. Samuels, Michael Benskin, Margaret Laing, and Keith Williamson. A Linguistic Atlas of Late Mediaeval English. 4 vols. Aberdeen: Aberdeen UP, 1987.
Series
Lynn, Richard John. Chinese Literature: A Draft Bibliography in Western European Languages. Oriental Monograph Series 24. Canberra: Australian National UP, 1979.
Translation
Moliere. Five Plays: Moliere. Trans. John Wood. Melbourne: Penguin, 1953.
Corporate author (ie: a company or organisation)
Australian Copyright Council. Copyright for Book Publishers: A Practical Guide. Redfern, NSW: ACC, 1997.
Conference (complete conference proceedings)
Balakian, Anna and James J. Wilhelm, eds. Proceedings of the Xth Congress of the International Comparative Literature Association: New York, NY, 1982. New York: Garland, 1985.
Government publication
Australia. Department of Aboriginal Affairs. Programs in Action for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander People: Achievements.
Canberra: Australian Government Publishing Service for Department of Aboriginal Affairs, 1989.
Thesis or dissertation
Woznica, Mirek. "A Counter-History of Art." PhD diss., Murdoch University, 1997.
(Please note: Titles of unpublished works are not italicised or underlined)
These examples are for chapters or parts of edited works in which the chapters or parts have individual title and author/s, but are included in collections or textbooks edited by others. If the editors of a work are also the authors of all of the included chapters then it should be cited as a whole book using the examples given above (Books).
| Author of Part, A. "Title of chapter or part." In Title: Subtitle of Book, Edition, edited by. A. Editor & B. Editor, inclusive page numbers. Place of publication: Publisher, Year. |
Single chapter from an anthology or compilation
Calvino, Italo. "Cybernetics and Ghosts." In The Uses of Literature: Essays,
translated by Patrick Creagh, 3-27. San Diego: Harcourt, 1982.
Conference or seminar paper (one paper from a conference proceedings)
Mann, Jill. "Chaucer and the 'Woman Question.'" In This Noble Craft: Proceedings of the Tenth Research Symposium of the Dutch and Belgian University Teachers of Old and Middle English and Historical Linguistics, Utrecht, 19-20 January 1989,
edited by Erik Kooper, 173-88. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1991.
Article in an encyclopaedia, signed
Fowler, Alastair. "Genre." International Encyclopedia of Communications,
edited by Erik Barnouw, et al. 4 vols. New York: Oxford University Press, c1989.
Study Guides and Unit Readers
Note: You should not cite from Unit
Readers, Study Guides, or lecture notes, but
where possible you should go to the original source of the information. If you
do need to cite articles from the Unit Reader, treat the Reader articles as if
they were book or journal articles. In your citations
refer to the page numbers from the Reader, not
the original page numbers (unless you have independently consulted the
original). In the reference list or bibliography use the bibliographical details
as quoted in the Reader.
Dillard, Annie. “When You Write.” In The Writing Life, 3-21. London: Pan Books, 1990. Reprinted in Introduction to Creative Arts (EGL114) Study Guide and Reader. Murdoch: Murdoch University, 2004.
Standard format
| Author of article. "Title of Article." Title of Journal volume, issue number (year): page number/s. |
Journal article: Continuous pagination across issues
Yeh, Michelle. "The 'Cult of Poetry' in Contemporary China." Journal of Asian Studies 55 (1996): 51-80.
Please note: The issue number need not be included if pagination is continuous across the whole volume.
Journal article: New paging in each issue (include issue number)
Hallin, Daniel C. "Sound Bite News: Television Coverage of Elections, 1968-1988." Journal of Communication 42, no. 2 (1992): 5-24.
Newspaper article
Buchanan, Rachel. "Truth and Valour: Anzac Day, the Myth." Sydney Morning Herald,
April 24, 1999.
Magazine article
Frank, Diana and Jeffrey Frank. "A Melancholy Dane: The Real Hans Christian Andersen." The New Yorker, January
8, 2001.
Standard format
| Author. Title of E-book. Place: Publisher, Date of original publication. Source. |
Bass, Len, Paul Clements, and Rick Kazman. Software Architecture in Practice. 2nd ed. Reading, MA: Addison Wesley, 2003. Safari e-book.
Eckes, Thomas. The Developmental Social Psychology of Gender. Mahwah NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum, 2000. netLibrary e-book.
Article in online encyclopaedia
Encarta Online Encyclopedia, s.v. "Fresco." Microsoft, 2001. http://encarta.msn.com/
(accessed September 12, 2001).
Hull, David L. "Philosophy of the Life Sciences." In Encyclopedia of the Life Sciences. Nature Publishing Group, Macmillan, 2001. http://www.els.net (accessed September 12, 2001).
Lai, M.C.C. "Hepatitis delta virus" In Encyclopedia of Virology, 2nd ed., ed. Allan Granoff and Roberts Webster. San Diego, CA: Academic, 1999. Science Direct. http://www.elsevier.com (accessed October 22, 2004).
"Suffragettes" In A Dictionary of Contemporary World History, ed. Jan Palmowski. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003. Oxford Reference Online. http://www.oxfordreference.com (accessed October 22, 2004).
Standard format
| Author. "Title of Article." Title of Journal. Volume, issue ( month year): page/paragraph numbers. Database Name (if appropriate). internet address (date of access). |
Journal article abstract accessed from online database Spencer, H.L. "Book and Verse: A Guide to Middle English Biblical Literature." The Review of English Studies 52, no. 206 (May 2001): 249. Abstract. ProQuest. http://www.umi.com/proquest/ (accessed September 12, 2001).
Please note: Abstract citations are only included in a Works Cited list if the abstract is substantial or if the full-text of the article could not be accessed.)
Journal article from online full-text database
Note: When including the internet address of articles retrieved from searches in full-text databases, please use the Recommended URLs for Full-text Databases, which are the URLs for the main entrance to the service and are easier to reproduce.
Hill, Thomas D. "Beowulf's Roman rites: Roman ritual and Germanic tradition." The Journal of English and Germanic Philology. 106, no.3 (2007): p325-335. Academic OneFile. http://find.galegroup.com (accessed September 18, 2001).
Mayor, S. "Cloned calves are grown from cultured cells." British Medical Journal 320, no. 7228 (2000): 136+. ProQuest. http://il.proquest.com (accessed June 30, 2001).
Journal article in a scholarly journal (published free of charge on the www)
Willinsky, J. "Proposing a Knowledge Exchange Model for Scholarly Publishing." Current Issues in Education. 3, no. 6 (2000). http://cie.ed.asu.edu/volume3/number6/
(accessed September 18, 2001).
Journal article in electronic journal subscription
Hampton, Mark. "The Press, Patriotism, and Public Discussion: C. P. Scott, The Manchester Guardian, and the Boer War, 1899-1902." The Historical Journal 44, no.1 (2001): 177-197. http://journals.cambridge.org
(accessed September 18, 2001).
Newspaper article from online database
"Moving up the Charts." South China Morning Post, May 26, 1995, Friday Entertainment: 24.
Factiva. http://global.factiva.com. (accessed September 19, 2001).
(Please note: This is an example of an article from a special section of the newspaper.)
Newspaper article from the World Wide Web
Le Grand, Danielle. "Record Crowds Say So Much for Monet." The West Australian, September
18, 2001. http://www.thewest.com.au (accessed September 18, 2001).
(Please note: The first date is the date of publication of the article and the second is the access date, which happens to be the same in this case.)
Standard format
| Author's name. Document title. Source/production information, Date of internet publication. internet address (Date of access). |
Professional Internet site
Romance Languages Resources. Chicago: U of Chicago, 2001. http://humanities.uchicago.edu/depts/romance/resources/index.html
(accessed September 12, 2001).
Personal Internet site
Lancashire, Ian. "Home page". http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~ian/index.html
(accessed September 12, 2001).
General Internet site
Harris, Jonathan G. "The Return of the Witch Hunts." Witchhunt Information. http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/Embassy/9062/fellsshort.html
(accessed September 12, 2001).
| Performer or Composer, A. Title : Subtitle. format. Special credits. Place of publication: Publisher, Year. |
Note: A performer or composer is only given principal credit if they are the focus of the recording, otherwise the material is listed in the bibliography by title.
“Black Hole Death Ray.” StarStuff. podcast radio programme. Presented by Stuart Gary. Sydney: ABC News Radio, December 23, 2007. http://abc.net.au/newsradio/podcast/STARSTUFF.xml (accessed February 4, 2008).
Film
Blade Runner. DVD. Directed by Ridley Scott with performances by Harrison Ford, Rutger Hauer,
and Sean Young.
Burbank, CA: Warner Home Video, 1983.
Video recording
The Neon Bible. VHS. Written and produced by Terence Davies. Triumph Video, 1998.
The works cited list should appear at the end of you paper. Begin the list on a new page. The title Works Cited should be centered on the page.
Please note the hanging indent for each reference makes the alphabetical sequence more obvious.
Australia. Department of Aboriginal Affairs. Programs in Action for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander People: Achievements. Canberra: Australian Government Publishing Service for Department of Aboriginal Affairs, 1989.
Australian Copyright Council. Copyright for Book Publishers: A Practical Guide. Redfern, NSW: ACC, 1997.
Balakian, Anna and James J. Wilhelm, eds. Proceedings of the Xth Congress of the International Comparative Literature Association: New York, NY, 1982. New York: Garland, 1985.
Blade Runner. DVD. Directed by Ridley Scott with performances by Harrison Ford, Rutger Hauer, Sean Young. Burbank, CA: Warner Home Video, 1983.
Boyle, Jimmy. The Pain of Confinement: Prison Diaries. Edinburgh: Canongate, 1984.
Buchanan, Rachel. "Truth and Valour: Anzac Day, the Myth". Sydney Morning Herald, April 24, 1999.
Encarta Online Encyclopedia, s.v. "Fresco". Microsoft, 2001. http://encarta.msn.com/ (accessed September 12, 2001).
Frank, Diana and Jeffrey Frank. "A Melancholy Dane: The Real Hans Christian Andersen." The New Yorker, January 8, 2001.
Hallin, Daniel C. "Sound Bite News: Television Coverage of Elections, 1968-1988." Journal of Communication 42, no.2 (1992): 5-24.
Hampton, Mark. "The Press, Patriotism, and Public Discussion: C. P. Scott, The Manchester Guardian, and the Boer War, 1899-1902." The Historical Journal 44, no. 1. (2001): 177-197. http://journals.cambridge.org (accessed September 18, 2001).
Le Grand, Danielle. "Record Crowds Say So Much for Monet." The West Australian, September18, 2001. http://www.thewest.com.au (accessed September 18, 2001).
Lynn, Richard John. Chinese Literature: A Draft Bibliography in Western European Languages. Oriental Monograph Series. 24. Canberra: Australian National UP, 1979.
Nesbit, E. Ballads and Lyrics of Socialism. London, 1908. In Victorian Women Writers Project, ed. Perry Willett. Indiana U, 1996. http://www.indiana.edu/~letrs/vwwp/nesbit/ballsoc.html (accessed September 12, 2001).
Pilger, John. Distant Voices. London: Vintage, 1992.
- - - . A Secret Country. London: Cape, 1989.
Savage-Rumbaugh, Sue, Stuart G. Shanker and Talbot J. Taylor. Apes, Language and the Human Mind. New York: Oxford UP, 1998.
Summerfield, Geoffrey. Voices: An Anthology of Poetry and Pictures. 3 vols. London: Penguin, 1968.
West, T. G., ed. and trans. Symbolism: An Anthology. London: Methuen, 1980.
Woznica, Mirek. "A Counter-History of Art." PhD diss., Murdoch U, 1997.
Yeh, Michelle. "The 'Cult of Poetry' in Contemporary China." Journal of Asian Studies 55 (1996): 51-80.
Young, Dougie. "I Don't Want Your Money." The Songs of Dougie Young. audiocassette. Canberra: National Library of Australia, 1994.
1. The Chicago Manual of Style, 15th ed. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2003), 571-577.
Some of the more often used examples are listed here.
| chap. | chapter |
| ed. (eds.) | edition, editor(s) |
| et al. | and others |
| n.d. | no date of publication |
| no. (nos.) | number(s) |
| n.p. | no place of publication |
| p. pp. | page(s) |
| par. | paragraph |
| pt. | part |
| rev. | revised |
| supp. or suppl. | supplement |
| trans. | translator, translated by |
| vol. | volume |
PLEASE NOTE: This list of examples is in no way exhaustive. Only the most often-used types of references are listed here. Refer to the following publications for more information on citing references
The Chicago Manual of Style. 15th ed. Chicago: U of Chicago P.,
2003.
Link Level 3 R 808.0270973 CHI 2003
Turabian, Kate L. A Manual for Writers of Term Papers, Theses, and Dissertations. 6th ed. Chicago: U of Chicago P., 1996.
South Wing Level 2 808.02 TUR 1996
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