DJS 204: Freedom & Social Control
Chicago Citation Resources
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Author-Date Sample Citations: Chicago Manual of Style OnlineLibrarian recommended! The Chicago Manual of Style Online offers examples of author-date entries for many common formats.
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NoodleTools
Walks you through the process for formatting citations and reference lists. Sign in or click on register to sign up for an account. NoodleTools uses Chicago Notes-Bibliography Style. See below for information on converting to Author-Date Style -
Chicago Style: Excelsior College Online Writing LabGives detailed information on formatting of Chicago style papers, footnotes/endnotes, and bibliography citations. Use the side menu to navigate to the information you need. Most Excelsior OWL examples use Chicago Notes-Bibliography Style. See below for information on converting to Author-Date Style
For a complete list of examples and specifics about Chicago style please refer to The Chicago Manual of Style, 17th edition. Use the links above for examples, tips, and further help.
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The Chicago Manual of Style, 18th Edition
Call Number: Click title to check availabilityPublication Date: 2024
Example Chicago Citations (Author-Date)
Some of the resources linked above use Notes-Bibliography style. This course requires the Author-Date style (preferred for natural, physical, and social sciences.) If you don't see an example of your source type below, convert a Notes-Bibliography style citation to Author-Date style by moving the year after the author(s) and following with a period. For more detailed information, consult the Chicago Manual of Style.
Journal Article
Book
Book Chapter
Website
*Citation examples taken from the Chicago Manual of Style, 17th ed. and the Purdue Online Writing Lab*
In-Text Citations
- In-text (or parenthetical) citations signal when you are quoting, summarizing, or paraphrasing someone else's work or ideas.
- Each in-text citation should match a source in your reference list, helping readers locate the original material.
- Citation placement depends on how you include the source in your writing—there’s more than one correct way to do it!
In-Text Citation Basic Rules
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Author-Date Sample Citations: Chicago Manual of Style OnlineLibrarian recommended! The Chicago Manual of Style Online offers examples of author-date entries for many common formats.
Basic Format: (Surname Year, Page)
Include page/section numbers when referring to a specific part of the work. Omit abbreviations such as ed. or trans.
Examples:
(Piaget 1980, 74)
(Claussen 2015, para. 2.15)
(Hellman 2017, under "The Battleground") This example refers to a section title since page/section numbers are not available.
Author mentioned in sentence (signal phrase)
When you include the author's name in your text, you do not need to repeat it in the parenthetical citation. Give the date (and page numbers) in parentheses immediately after the author's name.
Examples:
Fiorina et al. (2005) and Fischer and Hout (2006) reach more or less the same conclusions.
As Edward Tufte (2001, 139) points out, "A graphical element may carry data information and also perform a design function usually left to non-data-ink."
Punctuation
Author-date citations are generally placed before the punctuation mark in a sentence, although a punctuation mark is not needed if the sentence does not call for it.
Examples:
According to the data collected by Schonen et al. (2017), ...
...end of the sentence (Piaget 1980 ,74).
Fiorina et al. (2005) and Fischer and Hout (2006) reach more or less the same conclusions.
Use a block quotation if your quote is longer than 100 words or more than one paragraph: start the quote on a new line, indented an additional 0.5 inches. The parenthetical citation for a block quotation is placed after the punctuation mark.
Example:
...block quotation block quotation block quotation block quotation block quotation block quotation block quotation block quotation block quotation block quotation block quotation block quotation block quotation block quotation. (Piaget 1980, 74-75)
Sources with multiple authors
Two or three authors:
(Fischer and Hout 2006)
(Keng, Lin, and Orazem 2017, 9-10)
Four or more authors:
(Schonen et al. 2017)
Several references to the same source in a single paragraph
If you refer to the same page (or page range) several times in a paragraph, place the parenthetical citation after the last reference to the source, or at the end of the paragraph.
When you refer to different pages in the same source, place a full parenthetical citation after the first reference; include only the page number for the following references.
Example:
Complexion figures prominently in Morgan's descriptions. When Jasper compliments his mother's choice of car (a twelve-cylinder Mediterranean roadster with leather and wood-grained interior), "his cheeks blotch indignantly, painted by jealousy and rage" (Chaston 2000, 47). On the other hand, his mother's mask never changes, her "even-tanned good looks" (56), "burnished visage" (101), and "air-brushed confidence" (211) providing the foil to the drama in her midst.
*Citation examples taken from the Chicago Manual of Style, 17th ed.*