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Create a Chicago/Turabian Works Cited page entry for a(n):
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Format the Works Cited page
The bibliography, placed at the end of your
paper, is an alphabetized list of books, articles, and other sources used
in writing the paper.
Since the word bibliography technically means
all the works written on a particular subject, a more accurate heading
for this section of the paper would be, for example,
- Selected Bibliography
(if you list all of the sources you consulted in writing your paper)
- Works Cited
or References (if you list only the
items you actually cited in your paper).
While bibliographies and notes contain basically
the same information, the table below illustrates how bibliographic form
differs from note form:
| Note
form |
Bibliographic
form |
| |
[When alphabetizing, use the author's last name
for your entry; if it is not given, simply go on to the next item
in order (the title of the book or article, for example) and use
that to alphabetize the entry.] |
- author = first name and then last name
|
- author = last name, comma, then first name
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- location of publication, publisher, and year in parentheses
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- no parentheses for location, publisher, and year
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- uses commas to separate items
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- uses periods to separate items
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- lists specific pages from which you took information
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- lists entire books, complete chapters, or journal articles to
which you referred
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- first line indented 5 spaces; subsequent lines are not
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- first line not indented; subsequent lines are indented 5 spaces
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Sample note:
4. Donald N. McCloskey, Enterprise
and Trade in Victorian Britain: Essays
in Historical Economics (London: George
Allen and Unwin, 1981), 54.
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Sample bibliographic
entry:
McCloskey, Donald N. Enterprise and Trade
in Victorian England: Essays in
Historical Economics. London: George
Allen and Unwin, 1981.
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In either note or bibliographic form, if the author's name or the title
(or other item) is missing, simply go on to the next item as it should
appear.
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