Sunday, October 20, 2019
Chicago Referencing â⬠Repeat Citations - Proofeds Writing Tips Blog
Chicago Referencing ââ¬â Repeat Citations Chicago Referencing ââ¬â Repeat Citations If you have a useful source text, youââ¬â¢ll often want to cite it more than once in your work. But the Chicago Manual of Style has specific rules for doing this, so you need to how it works! Here, then, is our guide to repeat citations in Chicago style referencing. Consecutive Repeat Citations In Chicago footnote referencing, when you cite the same source twice in a row, you can use the Latin abbreviation ââ¬Å"ibid.â⬠This literally translates as ââ¬Å"in the same place.â⬠If you are citing exactly the same page as before, you can use ââ¬Å"ibid.â⬠by itself. If you are citing a different part of the text, you should give the new page number(s), too. For instance: 1. Alan C. Jenkins, Wildlife in the City: Animals, Birds, Reptiles, Insects and Plants in an Urban Landscape (London: Holt Company, 1983), 13. 2. Ibid. 3. Ibid., 102. Here, page 13 of Alan C. Jenkinsââ¬â¢ Wildlife in the City is cited in footnotes 1 and 2, while page 102 is cited in footnote 3. This saves us from writing out the full source information each time. Non-Consecutive Repeat Citations What, though, do you do when you need to repeat a citation after youââ¬â¢ve cited another source? In this case, Chicago referencing uses a shortened footnote style. These shortened footnotes should include: The authorââ¬â¢s surname The page(s) cited Non-consecutive citations of the same source would therefore look like this: 1. Alan C. Jenkins, Wildlife in the City: Animals, Birds, Reptiles, Insects and Plants in an Urban Landscape (London: Holt Company, 1983), 13. 2. Esther Woolfson, Corvus: A Life with Birds (London: Granta Publications, 2008), 234. 3. Jenkins, 102. If you have more than one source by the same author, however, you should also include a shortened version of the title. This will ensure the reader knows which source youââ¬â¢re citing. For instance: 1. Alan C. Jenkins, Wildlife in the City: Animals, Birds, Reptiles, Insects and Plants in an Urban Landscape (London: Holt Company, 1983), 13. 2. Esther Woolfson, Corvus: A Life with Birds (London: Granta Publications, 2008), 234. 3. Alan C. Jenkins, Introducing Cats (London: Spring Books, 1958), 24. 4. Jenkins, Wildlife in the City, 102. In this case, footnotes 1 and 4 point to the same source, while footnote 3 is another source by Jenkins. Authorââ¬âDate Citations Chicago referencing also has an authorââ¬âdate system, which uses in-text citations. To reference the same source more than once in this, all you have to do is give the same citation again: Alan Jenkins (1983) describes how birds of prey survive in urban settings. He says that peregrine falcons are a ââ¬Å"spectacular example of adaptive behaviorâ⬠(Jenkins 1983, 13). All you need to do with repeat authorââ¬âdate citations, then, is make sure they are consistent!
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