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Writing a Paper Using the Chicago/Turabian
In-Text Style of Citation

Turabian/Chicago Documentation Style

 

           Dissertation secretary Kate Turabian worked for more than thirty years at the University of Chicago editing over 11,000 theses.  In 1937, her first documentation guidelines were published in a 68-page booklet. Now in its sixth edition, A Manual for Writers of Term Papers of Research Theses, and Dissertations1 is the preferred documentation system for both scientific and non-scientific fields. This seventh edition is also referred to as Chicago Style for Student and Researchers.
          With the Turabian method of documentation, the writer has a choice of styles:  in-text references directing the reader to a list of bibliographic works at the end of the paper or a note system directing the reader to the bottom of the page or to the end of the text for the bibliographic information.  With the preferred note system, the complete bibliographic information is given the first time a source is cited.  If the source is cited again, the note gives less information.
     At LPTS all programs, other than the MFT and DMin in Pastoral Counseling, use the Chicago documentation style. Always ask your professor if you are not sure which paradigm to use.
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     1. Kate Turabian, A Manual for Writers of Term Papers, and Dissertations: Chicago Style for Students and Researchers, rev. Wayne Booth, Gregory Colomb and Joseph Williams 7th ed. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2007).

General Guidelines for Using Chicago\Turabian

  1. Italicize titles of books and journals.
  1. Titles of articles/chapters in books are put in quotation marks.
  1. Quotations longer than two sentences or eight lines of text are placed single-spaced and block
    indented four spaces from the left margin.  Do not use quotation marks, but do add the author and
    the page number at the end of the block quote.
  1. Page numbers of the paper should be at the right margin at the top of the page or centered at the
    bottom of the page.
  1. Abbreviate books of the Bible in both the text and the footnotes.  Also identify which version of the
    Bible is cited (NRSV, KJ). If all Bible quotes are from the same translation of the Bible then you only
    have to refer to the translation after the first quote.


  2. Do not include the Bible in the bibliography.
  • The latest edition of Turabian/Chicago guidelines on how to include internet resources is in Part II.
  • Turabian/Chicago gives the writer the choice between footnotes, endnotes, and parenthetical citations.
    Ask your professors which one they prefer.
  • If you cannot find an example of how to reference your source the seventh edition refers you back to the
    sixth edition of Turabian’s book.

Whatever you do be consistent.

 

 

                Writing a paper using the Turabian/Chicago Footnotes or Endnotes

    A.   General rules

  • Consecutively number footnotes or endnotes in regular script (not superscript) throughout the text.
    The computer will automatically put the number in superscript in the text and will place the footnote
    number at the bottom of the page (look under References, footnote in Word 2007).
  • Place footnotes at the bottom of the page where the quoted material/summary occurs or in the case of endnotes at the end of the text
  • Indent the first line of the footnote.

B. General guidelines for bibliographies

  • Title the bibliography, References, Works Cited, or Works Consulted. Place this on a separate page
    at the end of the paper.
  • Type in upper and lower case letters using the same size font as the rest of the paper
  • The list of sources should be

                                    1) Alphabetical order
    2) Hanging indent—the first line is flush with the left margin and the lines following are indented
                  Mapes, Kathryn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
                                             Louisville: Chalice Press, 2050.
                   3) Single space entries and double spaced between entries.
            4.   Use Ibid. if the preceding work is the same. Use Ibid., page number if the page number
                  is different (i.e. Ibid., 14). Ibid. means “in the same place.”

  The following examples of footnotes and the Reference page are from the seventh edition of A Manual for Writers part II. These are only a few of an exhaustive list.

Books with one author
                                   
1. Philip Ball, Bright Earth: Art and the Invention of Color (New York: Farrar,   Straus and Giroux, 2001), 140.

Ball, Philip. Bright Earth: Art and the Invention of Color. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2001.

Books with author and editor
                                                            2. Yves, Bonnefoy, New and Selected Poems, ed. John
Naughton and Anthony Rudolf  (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995),35.

Bonnefoy Yves. New and Selected Poems, Edited by John Naughton and Anthony Rudolf.               Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995.

Chapters in a book     
3. John Denos, “Real Lives and Other Fictions.” in Novel History: Historians and Novelists Comfort America’s Past, ed. Mark Carnes (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2001), 132-45.

Denos, John. “Real Lives and Other Fictions.” In Novel History: Historians and Novelists Comfort America’s Past, Edited by Mark Carnes, 132-45. New York: Simon and Schuster, 2001.

Chapter in a book that is part of a larger series
3. Barbara, Mundy , “Mesoamerican Cartography,” in Cartography in the Traditional African Societies, ed. David Woodward, vol 2 of The History of Cartography (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1998), 233.

Mundy, Barbara. “Mesoamerican Cartography,” in Cartography in the Traditional African Societies, ed. David Woodward, vol 2 of The History of Cartography .Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1998.

   Journals      
4. Nancy Green, “The Politics of Exit: Reversing the Immigration Paradigm,” Journal of Modern History 77 (June 2005):275.

Green, Nancy. “The Politics of Exit: Reversing the     Immigration Paradigm.” Journal of Modern History 77 (June 2005):263-89.

    Internet
5. Pliney the Elder, The Natural History, ed. John Bostock and H.TRiley, in Perseus Digital Library, http://perserseus.tufs (accessed April 1, 1902).

 Pliney the Elder, The Natural History. Edited by John Bostock and H.T. Riley. In Perseus Digital Library, http://perserseus.tufs (accessed April 1, 1902).

Commentary in a series--Anchor Bible series
Genesis, Anchor Bible Series (place: pub, date), page if necessary.

Genesis. Anchor Bible Series. Place: pub, date.
Commentary that appears in one multi volume of larger series-- New Interpreter’s Bible
Genesis. New Interpreter’s Bible. Vol #.  (Place: Pub, date), page if necessary.


Genesis. New Interpreter’s Bible. Vol #.  Place: Pub, date.

If there are editors or authors of the “chapter” then place that before the name of “chapter.” (e.g.
            Mapes, Kathryn, ed.  Genesis . . .

                  Bibleworks-from Bibleworks website, www.bibleworks.com, accessed Aug. 29,1011

General Citation for an Electronic Concordance Program

1 Michael S. Bushell and Michael D. Tan, BibleWorks 6.0.009i (BibleWorks, 2003).
Bushell, Michael S. and Michael D. Tan. BibleWorks 6.0.009i BibleWorks, 2003.

Citation for a Text Module from an Electronic Concordance Program

1 Martin G. Abegg Jr., “The Qumran Sectarian Manuscripts (withMorphological Tags) 1999, 2000, 2001,” BibleWorks 6.0.009i (BibleWorks, 2003).

Abegg, Martin G. Jr. The Qumran Sectarian Manuscripts (with Morphological Tags). 1999, 2000, 2001.
BibleWorks 6.0.009i BibleWorks, 2003.

Citation for a Lexicon Module from an Electronic Concordance Program
1 BDAG, BibleWorks 6.0.009i (BibleWorks, 2003).

Bauer, W., F. W. Danker, W. F. Arndt, and F. W. Gingrich. Greek-English Leixcon of the New Testament and
Other Early Christian Literature
. 3d ed. Chicago, 1999. BibleWorks 6.0.009i BibleWorks, 2003.


Writing a Paper Using the Turabian/Chicago Within the in-text Style of Citation

Citations within the paper

  • If the author is named in the sentence then just put the date of publication in parentheses after the
    author’s name.

 Mapes (1901) reports that all seminary students are overworked.

  • If you do not name the author within the text then put the last name of the author and the date of
    publication within parenthesis.

 Dogs are always welcome here on Louisville Seminary’s campus (Reistroffer 1903).

  • If you have a direct quote and name the author within the text, you must add the page number to
    the parenthetical information.

  Mapes said, “I wish it would snow so we could go home” (2001, 4).

  • If you have a direct quote and do not include the author’s name in the text you should have the author’s
    last name, date of publication, and page within parenthesis.

“Louisville Seminary’s campus is located in a beautiful setting” (Mapes 2001, 4).

  • Notice that there is not a comma between the author’s last name and the date of publication. There
    is a comma between the date of publication and the page number. Additionally there is no p before
    the page number.

 

References/Works Cited page

When in-text citations are used the reference is exactly like the one used for footnotes except the date of
publication goes directly after the author’s name.

                    

  • Example    Ray, Stephen. (2002). Do No Harm: Social Sin and Christian Responsibility.  Minneapolis: Fortress Press.

 

For more in-depth information consult Chapter #18 of Turabian, Kate. A Manual for Writers of Term Papers
and Theses,and Dissertations,
7th ed. . Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2007.

 

Check on

 

Internet Resources for Turabian/Chicago

 

http://www.bartleby.com/141/  --William Strunk’s The Elements of Style—This is an online version of Strunk’s classic reference of the principal requirements of plain English style and the rules of usage.   

http://www.chicagomanualofstyle.org/home.html --The Chicago Manual of Style FAQ (frequently asked questions). You can post questions or just read over the ones there.

http://www.chicagomanualofstyle.org/tools_citationguide.html
-- The official short guide to citations in Turabian style. Comprehensive list of examples.
 
http://www.bibleworks.com/forums/showthread.php?543-Citation-of-resources-on-Bibleworks-6&highlight=footnote –website for Bibleworks citations

 

Turabian, Kate. A Manual for Writers of research, Theses, and Dissertations. 7th ed. Chicago:    University of Chicago Press, 2007.
         ISBN# 13:978-0-226-82337-9

 

 

 

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