Why Chicago/Turabian?
Research papers often build on the work of previous research. Whenever you write a paper and use the material of another author, you must document that source.
Documentation credits the author and
publisher of the original work and provides the necessary information for
readers to consult the same sources.
Further Resources
At the Mansfield Library
The Chicago Manual of Style Online. Fifteenth Edition.
(to use a hardcopy, ask at the Information Desk):
The Chicago Manual of Style. Fifteenth Ed. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2003.
Turabian, Kate, et al. A Manual for Writers of Research Papers, Theses, and Dissertations. Seventh Ed. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2007.
Online Guides:
How to Format a Bibliography
In-text Citations
CITING QUOTATIONS IN TEXT
There are a few different ways to cite quotations using
the Turabian/Chicago citation style. While in the past the footnote and endnote
methods were more common, recently the parenthetical method has become more
accepted. The citation can be done in several ways, but the author, publishing
date and page number (or verse or paragraph number) must be included. The
following examples are taken from Kate L. Turabian’s book, A Manual for
Writers of Research Papers, Theses, and Dissertations, 7th ed.
Quotation 1
Turabian (2007) is careful to point out the requirement
that “you list all sources in a reference list” (216).
Quotation 2
The importance of proper citation cannot be understated;
indeed, readers rely upon accurately cited sources (Turabian 2007, 217).
Quotation 3
Turabian states:
Although sources and their citations come in almost endless variety, you are likely to use only a few kinds. While you may need to look up details to cite some unusual sources, you can easily learn basic patterns for the kinds that you will use most often (2007, 217).
Important to Note!
- If an article does not list page numbers, such as a full-text HTML article from an online database, use a “descriptive locator” such as a heading or section name following the word under.
- For anything inserted within the quotation that is not part of the original text brackets, rather than parentheses, should be used.
- If a word is misspelled or used incorrectly in the original text, leave it uncorrected in the quotation with a bracketed [sic] following it.
- If any word or number of words is/are omitted from the original text in the quotation, an ellipsis in parentheses (…) must be in place of the missing text.
- To use a quotation from more than one author include both authors’ last names, or for many authors, the primary author’s last name followed by the phrase “et al.”.
- Even if information from a source is paraphrased, it still must be cited.
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