CHAPTER 6:
Other Systems of
Documentation
Other
Systems of Documents
This appendix describes three documentation systems other than the MLA system. The appendix ends with a selected list of specialized style manuals.
6.1. ENDNOTES AND FOOTNOTES
Some scholars in the fields of art, dance, history, music, religion, theater, and theology use endnotes or footnotes to document sources.
6.1.1.
Documentation Notes versus the List of Works Cited and Parenthetical References
If you use notes for documentation, you may not need a list of works cited or a bibliography. The first note referring to a source includes the publication information found in a bibliographic entry—the author's name, the title, and the publication facts—as well as the page reference identifying the portion of the source you refer to at that point in the text. (Subsequent references to the work require less information; see B.1.9.) A bibliographic entry for a work published as part of a book or periodical usually ends with the inclusive page numbers for the entire work cited, but a documentation note, in contrast, ends with the page number or numbers only of the portion you refer to. Note form differs slightly from bibliographic form in other ways (see B.1.3), and note numbers replace parenthetical references at the points in the text where citations are necessary (see B.1.2). Documentation notes appear either at the end of the text, as endnotes, or at the bottoms of relevant pages, as footnotes (see B.1.4).
6.1.2.
Note Numbers
Number notes consecutively, starting from 1, throughout a research paper, except for any notes accompanying special material, such as a figure or a table (see 4.7). Do not number them by page or designate them by asterisks or other symbols. Format note numbers as superior, or superscript, arable numerals (i.e., raised slightly above the line, like this), without periods, parentheses, or slashes. The numbers follow punctuation marks, except dashes. In general, to avoid interrupting the continuity of the text, place a note number, like a parenthetical reference, at the end of the sentence, clause, or phrase containing the material quoted or referred to.
6.1.3.
Note Form versus Bibliographic Form
With some exceptions, documentation notes and bibliographic entries provide the same information but differ in form.
Bibliographic
Form
A bibliographic entry has three main divisions, each followed by a period: the author's name reversed for alphabetizing, the title, and the publication data.
Tannen,
Deborah. You Just Don't
Understand: Women and Men in Conversation.
Note
Form
A documentation note has four main divisions: the author's name in normal order, followed by a comma; the title; the publication data in parentheses; and a page reference. There is a period only at the end.
1 Deborah Tannen, You Just Don't Understand: Women and Men in Conversation (New York: Morrow, 1990) 52.
6.1.4.
Endnotes versus Footnotes
In research papers, make all notes endnotes, unless you are instructed otherwise. As their name implies, endnotes appear after the text, starting on a new page numbered in sequence with the preceding page. Center the title Notes one inch from the top, double-space, indent one-half inch (or five spaces, if you are using a typewriter) from the left margin, and add the note number, without punctuation, slightly above the line. Type a space and then the reference. If the note extends to two or more lines, begin subsequent lines at the left margin. Type the notes consecutively, double-spaced, and number all pages.
Footnotes
appear at the bottoms of pages, beginning four lines (two double spaces) below the text. Single-space footnotes, but
double-space between them. Otherwise, format a footnote like an endnote. When a
footnote continues on the following page, add a solid line across the new page
two lines (one double space) below the last line of the text and continue the
note two lines (one double space) below the solid line. Footnotes for the new
page immediately follow the note continued from the previous page, after a
double space.
6.1.5. Sample First Note References: Books and
Other Nonperiodical Publications
For additional information on citing the following
types of sources, consult the related sections on bibliographic entries,
indicated in parentheses after the headings.
a. A Book by a Single Author (5.6.1)
1 Francis
b. An Anthology or a Compilation (5.6.2)
2 Susan Ostrov Weisser, ed., Women
and Romance: A Reader (
c. A Book by Two or More Authors (5.6.4)
3 James W. Marquart, Sheldon Ekland Olson, and
Jonathan R. Sorensen,
The Rope, the Chair, and the
Needle: Capital Punishment in
d. A Book by a Corporate Author (5.6.6)
4 Public Agenda Foundation, The
Health Care Crisis: Containing Costs, Expanding
Coverage (New York: McGraw, 1992)
69.
e. A Work in an Anthology (5.6.7)
5 Isabel Allende, "Toad's Mouth," trans.
Margaret Sayers Peden, A Hammock beneath the Mangoes: Stories from
If you cite two or more works by the same author—for example, Northrop Frye's Anatomy of Criticism and his The Double Vision—include a shortened form of the title following the author's last name in each reference after the first.
8 Frye, Anatomy 278.
9
Frye, Double Vision 1-3.
Repeat the information even when two references in sequence refer to the same work. The abbreviations ibid. and op. cit. are not recommended.
6.2. AUTHOR-DATE SYSTEM
The author-date system, used in the social sciences and in many of the physical sciences, requires that a parenthetical reference include the author's last name, a comma, the work's year of publication, another comma, and the page reference, preceded by the abbreviation p. or pp.: "(Wilson, 1992, p. 73)." Information cited in the text is omitted from the parenthetical reference. The authoritative guide to this documentation system is the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association (see the list of specialized style manuals in B.4), and the system is often called APA style.
APA and MLA bibliographic forms differ in a number of ways: in APA style, only the initials of the author's first and middle names are given; the year of publication, in parentheses, follows the author's name; for a book, only proper nouns and the first word of the title and of the subtitle are capitalized; book titles are italicized; and the names of some publishers, such as university presses and associations, are spelled out. The second and subsequent lines of the entry are indented as in MLA style.
Tannen, D. (1990). You just
don't understand: Women and men in conversation.
If the book is edited, the abbreviation Ed. or Eds., in parentheses, precedes the year of publication.
Tannen, D. (Ed.). (1993). Gender and conversational interaction.
If there are two or more authors, each name is
reversed, and an ampersand (&), not the word and, precedes the final name.
Durant, W., & Durant, A. (1977). A dual
autobiography.
Titles of essays, book chapters, and articles in
periodicals are capitalized like titles of books but are neither put in
quotation marks nor italicized. Journal titles, however, are capitalized in a
manner consistent with MLA capitalization style (see 3.6.1) but are
italicized. The volume number, also italicized, follows the journal title and a
comma; the issue number, if needed, appears in parentheses after the volume
number; a comma and the inclusive
page numbers for the article complete the entry.
Craner, P. M. (1991). New tool for an ancient
art: The computer and music. Computers and the Humanities, 25, 303-313.
If the list of works cited includes more than one
work by an author, the entries are arranged chronologically, and the author's
name is repeated in each entry. If two or more works by the same author were
published in a year, each is assigned a lowercase letter: "(1998a),"
"(1998b)." For a multivolume work, the range of volume numbers is
given in parentheses, preceded by the abbreviation Vols.: "(Vols.
1-4)."
The following parenthetical references and
corresponding list of works cited demonstrate the author-date system.
Between 1968 and 1988,
television coverage of presidential elections changed dramatically (Hallin,
1992, p. 5).
Eighteenth-century
Frye defined the alazon as a
"self-deceiving or self-deceived character in fiction"
(1957a, p. 365).
Wellek admits in the middle of
his multivolume history of modern literary criticism, "An evolutionary history
of criticism must fail. I have come to this resigned conclusion" (1955-1992,
Vol. 5, p. xxii).
There are several excellent
essays in the book Sound and Poetry (Frye, 19576).
To Will and Ariel Durant,
creative men and women make "history forgivable by enriching our heritage
and our lives" (1977, p. 406).
References
Durant, W., & Durant, A. (1965). The age of
Voltaire.
Durant, W., & Durant, A.
(1977). A dual autobiography.
Frye, N. (1957a). Anatomy of
criticism: Four essays.
Frye, N. (Ed.). (19576). Sound
and poetry.
Hallin, D. C. (1992). Sound bite
news: Television coverage of elections, 1968-1988. Journal of Communication, 42(2), 5-24.
Wellek, R. (1955-1992). A history
of modern criticism,
1750-1950 (Vols. 1-8).
6 .3. NUMBER SYSTEM
Disciplines such as chemistry, mathematics, medicine, and physics use the number system, which varies from field to field (see the list of specialized style manuals by discipline in B.4). In the number system, arabic numerals designate entries in the list of works cited and appear in parenthetical documentation followed by commas and the relevant volume and page references, which are preceded by the appropriate abbreviations: "(13, Vol. 5, p. 259)." With this system, the year of publication remains at the end of the bibliographic entry, and the works are usually listed not in alphabetical order but in the order in which they are first cited in the text. Capitalization of titles generally follows APA style (B.2).
But Peter Scotto has offered
another view (1).
Frye defined the alazon as
a "self-deceiving or self-deceived character in fiction"
(2, p. 365).
Wellek admits in the middle of
his multivolume history of modern literary criticism, "An evolutionary
history of criticism must fail. I have come to this resigned conclusion"
(3, Vol. 5, p. xxii).
Eighteenth-century
To Will and Ariel Durant,
creative men and women make "history forgivable by enriching
our heritage and our lives" (5, p. 406).
Works Cited
Appendix 1: SPECIALIZED
STYLE MANUALS
Every scholarly field has its preferred style, or
set of guidelines for writing. MLA style, as presented in this manual, is
widely accepted in humanities disciplines. The following manuals describe the
styles of other disciplines.
Biology
Council
of Biology Editors. Scientific
Style and Format: The CBE Manual
for Authors, Editors, and
Publishers, By Edward J. Huth.
6th ed.
Chemistry
American
Chemical Society. The ACS Style
Guide: A Manual for Authors and Editors. Ed. Janet
Geology
Linguistics
Linguistic Society of
Mathematics
American
Mathematical Society. AMS Author Handbook.
Medicine
American
Medical Association. AMA Manual of Style: A Guide for Authors and Editors.
By Cheryl Iverson et al. 9th ed.
Physics
American Institute of Physics. AlP Style Manual.
4th ed.
Psychology
American
Psychological Association. Publication Manual of the American Psychological
Association. 5th ed.
There are also style manuals that address
primarily editors and concern procedures for preparing a manuscript for
publication:
The
Words
into Type. By Marjorie E.
Skillin, Robert M. Gay, et al. 3rd ed.
Waheed, Abdul, and Samreen Lateef, comp. Bibliographic Citations.
For other style manuals
and authors' guides, see
John Bruce How-ell, Style Manuals of the
English-Speaking World (Phoenix: Oryx, 1983).
APPENDIX
2: ABBREVIATIONS
APP
2.1 INTRODUCTION
Abbreviations are used regularly in the list of works cited and in tables but rarely in the text of a research paper (except within parentheses). In choosing abbreviations, keep your audience in mind. While economy of space is important, clarity is more so.
Spell out a term if the abbreviation may puzzle your readers.
When abbreviating, always use accepted forms. In appropriate contexts, you may abbreviate the names of days, months, and other measurements of time
The trend in abbreviation is to use neither periods after letters nor spaces between letters, especially for abbreviations made up of all capital letters.
BC MA S
NJ CD-ROM
The chief exception to this trend continues to be the initials used for personal names: a period and a space ordinarily follow each initial.
J. R. R. Tolkien
Most abbreviations that end in lowercase letters are followed by periods.
assn. fig. Mex.
In most abbreviations made up of lowercase letters that each represent a word, a period follows each letter, but no space intervenes between letters.
a.m. e.g.
i.e. n.p.
But there are numerous exceptions.
mph os
ns rpm
APP 2.2 TIME DESIGNATIONS
Spell out the names of months in the text but
abbreviate them in the list of works cited, except for May, June, and
July. Whereas words denoting units of time are also spelled out in the text (second, minute,
week, month, year, century), some time designations are used only in
abbreviated form (a.m., p.m., AD, BC, BCE, CE).
AD after the birth of Christ (from the Latin anno Domini 'in the year of the Lord’; used before numerals ["AD 14") and after references to centuries ["twelfth century AD"])
a.m. before
Apr. April
Aug. August
BC before Christ (used after numerals ["19 BC"] and references to centuries ["fifth century BC"])
BCE before the common era (used after numerals and references to centuries)
CE common era (used after numerals and references to centuries)
cent. century
Dec. December
Feb. February
Fri. Friday
hr. hour
Jan. January
Mar. March
min. minute
mo. month
Mon. Monday
Nov. November
Oct . October
p.m. after
Sat. Saturday
sec. second
Sept. September
Sun. Sunday
Thurs. Thursday
Tues. Tuesday
Wed. Wednesday
wk. week
yr. year
APP 2.3. GEOGRAPHIC NAMES
Spell
out the names of states, territories, and possessions of the
APP
2.4 COMMON SCHOLARLY ABBREVIATIONS
The following list includes abbreviations commonly used in humanities research studies in English. Abbreviations within parentheses are alternative but not recommended forms. Most of the abbreviations listed would replace the spelled forms only in parentheses, tables, and documentation.
abbr. abbreviation, abbreviated
abr. abridgment, abridged, abridged by
acad. academy
adapt. adapter, adaptation, adapted by
adj. adjective
adv. adverb
Amer.
anon. anonymous
app. appendix
arch. archaic
art. article
assn. association
assoc. associate, associated
attrib. attributed to
aux. auxiliary
b. born
BA bachelor of arts
bib. biblical
bibliog. bibliographer, bibliography, bibliographic
biog. biographer, biography, biographical
bk. book
BL British Library,
BM
BS bachelor of science
bull, bulletin
© copyright ("© 2003")
c.
(ca.) circa, or around (used
with approximate dates: "c. 1796")
cap. capital, capitalize
CD compact disc
CD-ROM compact disc read-only memory
cf. compare (not
"see"; from the Latin confer)
ch. (chap.) chapter
chor. choreographer, choreographed by
col. column
coll. college
colloq. colloquial
com commercial (used as a suffix in Internet domain names: "www.dawn.com")
comp. compiler, compiled by
compar. comparative
cond. conductor, conducted by
conf. conference
Cong. Congress
Gong.
Rec. Congressional Record
conj. conjunction
Const. Constitution
cont. contents; continued
(contd.) continued
d. died
DA doctor of arts
DA,
DAI Dissertation Abstracts,
Dissertation Abstracts International
DAB Dictionary of American Biography
def. definition; definite
dept. department
dev. development, developed by
dict. dictionary
dir. director, directed by
diss. dissertation
dist. district
distr. distributor, distributed by
div. division
DNB Dictionary of National Biography
doe. document
DVD originally digital videodisc but now used to describe discs containing a wide range of data
ed. editor, edition, edited by
EdD doctor of education
edu educational (used as a suffix in Internet domain names: "www.gcu.edu.pk"
educ. education, educational
e.g. for example (from the Latin exempli gratin; rarely capitalized; set off by commas, unless pre-ceded by a different punctuation mark)
e-mail electronic mail
encyc. encyclopedia
enl. enlarged (as in "rev. and enl. ed.")
esp. especially
et
al. and others (from the
Latin et alii, et aliae)
etc. and so forth (from the Latin et cetera; like most abbreviations, not appropriate in text)
ex. example
fac. faculty
facsim. facsimile
fig. figure
fl. flourished, or reached greatest development or influence (from the Latin floruit; used before dates of historical figures when birth and death dates are not known: "fl. 1200")
fr. from
front. frontispiece
FTP File Transfer Protocol ("ftp" at the beginning of an Internet address)
fut. future
fwd. foreword, foreword by;
forwarded (as in "fwd. by")
gen. general (as in "gen. ed.")
gov government
(used as a suffix in Internet domain
names: "www.census.gov")
govt. government
GPO General Post Office
H. Doc. House of Representatives Document
Inst. historian, history, historical
HMSO Her (His) Majesty's Stationery
Office,
HR House of Representatives
H. Rept. House of Representatives Report
H. Res. House of Representatives Resolution
HTML Hypertext Markup Language
HTTP Hypertext
Transfer Protocol ("http" at the begin‑
ning of an Internet address)
i.e. that is (from the Latin id est; rarely capitalized; set off by commas, unless preceded by a different punctuation mark)
illus. illustrator, illustration, illustrated by
inc. including; incorporated
infin. infinitive
inst. institute,
institution
intl. international
introd. introduction,
introduced by
ips inches
per second (used in reference to tape recordings)
irreg. irregular
JD doctor
of law (from the Latin June doctor)
jour. journal
Jr. Junior
KB kilobyte
(I.II.)
line, lines (avoided in
favor of line and lines or, if clear, numbers only)
Lang. language
LC Library
of Congress
leg. legal
legis. legislator,
legislation, legislature, legislative
lib. library
lit. literally;
literature, literary
LLB bachelor
of laws (from the Latin legume baccalaureus)
LLD doctor
of laws (from the Latin legum doctor)
LLM master
of laws (from the Latin legum magister)
LP long-playing
phonograph record
ltd. limited
MA master
of arts
mag. magazine
MB megabyte
MD doctor
of medicine (from the Latin medicinae doctor)
misc. miscellaneous
mod. modern
MOO multiuser domain, object-oriented
(cf. MUD)
MS master
of science
ms., mss. manuscript,
manuscripts (as in "Bodleian ms. Tanner 43"; cf. ts., tss.)
MUD multiuser
domain (cf. MOO)
n, nn note, notes (used immediately after the
number of the page containing the text of the note or notes: "56n,"
"56n3," "56nn3–5")
n. noun
narr. narrator,
narrated by
natl. national
NB take
notice (from the Latin nota bene; always capitalized)
n.d no
date of publication
NED A
New English Dictionary (cf. OED)
no. number
(cf. numb.)
nonstand nonstandard
n.p. no
place of publication; no publisher
n.pag. no
pagination
ns new series
NS New Style (calendar designation)
numb. numbered (cf. no.)
obj. object, objective
obs. obsolete
OCLC Online
OED The
English Dictionary [NED])
op. opus (work)
orch. orchestra (also Italian orchestra, French orchestre, etc.), orchestrated by
org organization (used as a suffix in Internet domain names: "www.mla.org")
orig. original, originally
os old series; original series
OS Old Style (calendar designation)
P Press (used in
documentation; cf. UP)
p., pp. page, pages (omitted before page numbers unless necessary for clarity)
par. paragraph
part. participle
perf. performer, performed by
PhD doctor of philosophy (from the
Latin philosophiae doctor)
philol. philological
philos. philosophical
pl. plate; plural
poss. possessive
pref. preface, preface by
prep. preposition
pres. present
proc. proceedings
prod. producer, produced by
pron. pronoun
pronunc. pronunciation
PS postscript
pseud. pseudonym
pt. part
pub. (pub].) publisher, publication, published by
qtd. quoted
r. reigned
R Reference (used to indicate the reference section in a library)
rec. record, recorded
Ref Reference (used to indicate the reference section in a library)
reg. registered; regular
rel. release
rept. report, reported by
resp. respectively
rev. review, reviewed by; revision, revised, revised by (spell out review where rev. might be ambiguous)
rpm revolutions per minute (used in reference to phonograph recordings)
rpt. reprint, reprinted, reprinted by
S Senate
sc. scene (omitted when act and
scene numbers are used together for
verse plays: "King Lear
4.1")
sec. (sect.) section
ser. series
sic thus in the source (in square brackets as an editorial interpolation, otherwise in parentheses; not followed by an exclamation point)
sing. singular
soc. society
spec. special
st. stanza
Stat. Statutes at Large
subj. subject, subjective; subjunctive
substand. substandard
supp. supplement
syn. synonym
trans. (tr.) transitive; translator, translation, translated by
ts., tss. typescript, typescripts (cf. ms., mss.)
U University
(also Spanish Universidad,
univ. university (used outside documentation—e.g., in parentheses and tables: "Montclair State Univ.")
URL uniform resource locator
usu. usually
vb. verb
vers. version
VHS video home system (the recording and playing standard for videocassette recorders)
vol. volume
vs. (v.) versus (v preferred in titles of legal ases)
writ. writer, written by
www World Wide Web (used in the names of servers, or computers, on the Web)