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Chicago 17th (B) Author-Date

Books and chapters

  • For quotations and references to specific passages, citations include page numbers.
  • The edition is only included if it is not the first edition.
  • Non-English Names in an English Context - Naming conventions for non-English authors may differ, refer to the manual.
  • The Chicago Manual of Style does not require that access dates be included in references to formally published online sources, unless no date of publication is provided.

In-text citation

Format

(Author Surname Year of publication, Pages)

Example

(McCune 2014, 32)

Reference list

Format

Author Surname, First Name. Year of publication. Title of Book: Subtitle. Location: Publisher.

Example

McCune, Jeffrey Q. 2014. Sexual Discretion: Black Masculinity and the Politics of Passing. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

In-text citation

Format
 
Two authors
 

(First Author Surname and Second Author Surname Year of publication, Pages)


Three authors
 

(First Author Surname, Second Author Surname, and Third Author Surname Year of publication, Pages)


Four or more authors
 

(First Author Surname et al. Year of publication, Pages)

Example
 
Two authors
 

(Suhrke and Adelman 1999, 43–45)


Three authors
 

(Horovitz, Yauch, and Diamond 1994, 55)


Four or more authors
 

(Laumann et al. 1994, 4)

Reference list

Format

First Author Surname, First Author First Name, and Subsequent Author Full Names. Year of publication. Title of Book: Subtitle. Location: Publisher.

Example

Suhrke, Astri, and Howard Adelman. 1999. The Path of a Genocide: The Rwanda Crisis From Uganda to Zaire. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers.

Laumann, Edward O., John H. Gagnon, Robert T. Michael, and Stuart Michaels. 1994. The Social Organization of Sexuality: Sexual Practices in the United States. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Tips

  • Multiple authors are listed in the same order as they appear on the title page, which may not necessarily be alphabetical order.
  • For books with two or more authors, only the first-listed name is inverted in the reference list.
  • For books with more than ten authors, list only the first seven authors in the reference list, followed by et al.

In-text citation

Format

(Organisation Name Year of publication, Pages)

 

OR

 

(Organisation Acronym Year of publication, Pages)

Example

(United States Holocaust Memorial Museum 1998, 4)

 

OR

 

(USHMM 1998, 4)

Reference list

Format

Organisation Name. Year of publication. Title of Book: Subtitle. Location: Publisher.

 

OR

 

Acronym (Organisation Name). Year of publication. Title of Book: Subtitle. Location: Publisher.

Example

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. 1998. Hidden History of the Kovno Ghetto. Boston, MA: Little Brown and Company.

 

OR

 

USHMM (United States Holocaust Memorial Museum). 1998. Hidden History of the Kovno Ghetto. Boston, MA: Little Brown and Company.

Tips

  • If there is no person’s name on the title page, cite the organisation in the place of an author.
  • For shorter in-text citations, an organisation may be cited under their acronym. The entry must be alphabetised under that abbreviation (rather than the spelled-out name) in the reference list.
  • If referring to the organisation in the body of your work, acronyms are spelled out in the first instance followed by the abbreviated form enclosed in parentheses, subsequent instances use the abbreviated form alone.

In-text citation

Format

(Editor Surname Year of publication, Pages)

Example

(Watts 2003, 73)

Reference list

Format

Editor Surname, First Name, ed. Year of publication. Title of Book: Subtitle. Location: Publisher.

Example

Watts, Margit Misangyi, ed. 2003. Technology: Taking the Distance out of Learning. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

Tips

  • Works prepared by multiple editors follow the same patterns as those prepared by multiple authors.
  • Do not include abbreviations such as ed. in the citation.

In-text citation

Format

(Chapter Author Surname Year of publication, Pages)

Example

(Jones 1998, 56)

Reference list

Format

Chapter Author Surname, First Name. Year of publication. “Chapter Title.” In Title of Book: Subtitle, edited by Editor Full Name, Chapter Page Range. Location: Publisher.

Example

Jones, Colin. 1998. “Nobles, Bourgeois and the Origins of the French Revolution.” In The French Revolution: Recent Debates and New Controversies, edited by Gary Kates, 44–67. London: Routledge.

Tips

  • Often an edited book will have different authors for each chapter. In this case, you should cite the relevant chapter as well as the book as a whole.
  • For quotations and references to specific passages cite the page number in the citation, but indicate the chapter's range of pages in the reference list.

In-text citation

Format

(Author Surname Year of publication, Page or Chapter Number)

Example

(Edwards 2010, chap. 2)

Reference list

Format

Author Surname, First Name. Year of publication. Title of Book: Subtitle. Location: Publisher. Application/Device/File Format/DOI/URL.

Example

Edwards, Andres R. 2010.Thriving Beyond Sustainability: Pathways to a Resilient Society. Gabriola Island, BC: New Society Publishers. Kindle eBook.

Bonds, Mark Evan. 2014. Absolute Music: The History of an Idea. New York: Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199343638.001.0001.

Lystra, Karen. 2004. Dangerous Intimacy: The Untold Story of Mark Twain’s Final Years. Berkeley: University of California Press. http://ark.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/kt8779q6kr/.

Tips

  • E-books are referenced in the same way as print books with the addition of an application, device, file format, DOI or URL.
  • If allocated, the DOI is preferred over a URL. Note that a DOI should be included in the form of a URL starting with https://doi.org/.
  • Many e-books do not have fixed page numbers. In this case, use other locaters such as a chapter number or a section heading.

In-text citation

Format

(Author Surname [Original Year] Modern Year, Pages of Modern Edition)

Example

(Austen [1813] 2003, 74)

Reference list

Format

Author Surname, First Name. (Original Year) Modern Year. Title of Book: Subtitle. Location: Publisher.

Example

Austen, Jane. (1813) 2003. Pride and Prejudice. London: T. Egerton. Reprint, New York: Penguin Classics.

Tips

  • This format should be used when the original year of publication is relevant, such as to emphasise the historical context of a reissued publication.
  • The citation refers to the modern edition.

In-text citation

Format

(Author Surname Year, Pages)

Example

(García Márquez 1988, 242–55)

Reference list

Format

Author Surname, First Name. Year of publication. Title of Book: Subtitle. Translated by Translator’s Full Name. Location: Publisher.

Example

García Márquez, Gabriel. 1988. Love in the Time of Cholera. Translated by Edith Grossman. London: Cape.

In-text citation

Format

(Chapter Author Surname Year of publication, Pages)

 

OR

 

(Short form of the title Year)

Example

(Friedman 2018)

 

OR

 

(Mary Cassatt 1998)

Reference list

Format

Chapter Author Surname, First Name. Year of publication. “Chapter Title.” In Title of Catalogue. Institution’s Name. Location: Publisher. Published in conjunction with the exhibition of the same name, shown at Institution’s Name.

 

OR

 

Title of Catalogue. Year of publication. Edited by Editor Full Name. Location: Publisher. Published in conjunction with the exhibition of the same name, shown at Institution’s Name.

Example

Friedman, Samantha. 2018. “Inner and Outer Worlds.” In MoMA at NGV: 130 Years of Modern and Contemporary Art. National Gallery of Victoria and The Museum of Modern Art. 92–115. Melbourne: National Gallery of Victoria. Published in conjunction with the exhibition of the same name, shown at the National Gallery of Victoria.

 

OR

 

Mary Cassatt: Modern Woman. 1998. Edited by Judith A. Barter. Chicago: Art Institute of Chicago, in association with Harry N. Abrams. Published in conjunction with the exhibition of the same name, shown at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, the National Gallery in Washington, DC, and the Art Institute of Chicago.

Tips

  • Reference exhibition catalogues in the same way as other published books.
  • Specific essays may be referenced like chapters in edited books.
  • If the author is unknown, exhibition catalogues may be referenced by the title.
  • In the reference list also provide the exhibition and the institution with which the publication is associated.

In-text citation

Format

(quoted in Secondary Source Author Surname Year of publication, Pages)

Example

In Louis Zukofsky’s “Sincerity and Objectification,” from the February 1931 issue of Poetry magazine (quoted in Costello 1981) . . .

Reference list

Format

Secondary Source Author Surname, First Name. Year of publication. Title of Work: Subtitle. Location: Publisher.

Example

Costello, Bonnie. 1981. Marianne Moore: Imaginary Possessions. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Tips

  • Consult and reference the original source yourself if possible.
  • If an original source is unavailable, mention the original author and date in the text, and cite only the secondary source in the reference list.

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