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Preferences
for footnoting and bibliographical style. Good practice in citing sources in
history papers calls for footnotes (or endnotes) and bibliographies. Consistency
of style is essential, though the department has no required particular style;
instructors have the last word in what is appropriate for their courses. On the
whole the History Department advises that you follow The Chicago Manual of Style, 16th ed. Chicago, Chicago University
Press, 2010 (on-line at http://www.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/cul/resolve?clio6042885).
We urge you to develop good habits in citing authorities for history papers
along the following general rules:
Footnotes
are preferred to in-text citations. In this respect, history differs from
most science, social science and some humanities disciplines. Short essays with
only a few well-identified sources may simply employ in-text citations, for
example: (Smith, 34), but longer essays should use full footnotes and include a
bibliography.
In
footnotes, authors’ names are arranged with family name last, followed by given
names, e.g. Fredrick Flintstone and Barnaby Rubble, Of Rocks and Dinosaurs.
For
example, from a hypothetical research paper about The New York Times and
reports from Moscow and Hanoi by the correspondent and writer Harrison
Salisbury.
-
Gay Talese, The Kingdom and the Power, 2nd ed.
(New York: Ivy Press, 1992): 501.
-
Richard F.
Shepard, The Paper’s Papers: A
Reporter’s Journey through the Archives of the New York Times (New
York: Times Books, 1996): 100.
-
Harrison
Salisbury, ‘Without Fear or Favor’:
The New York Times and its Times (New York: Times Books, 1996): 13.
-
Salisbury, A Journey for Our Times: A Memoir (New
York: Harper & Row, 1983): 323.
-
Shepard, Paper’s Papers, 178.
-
Salisbury, Journey, 15.
-
Mark A.
Lawrence, “Mission Intolerable: Harrison Salisbury’s Trip to Hanoi,” Pacific Historical Review 75
(August 2006): 430.
-
Susan E. Tifft
and Alex S. Jones, The Trust: the
Private and Powerful Family behind the New York Times (Boston: Little
Brown, 1999): 630.
Bibliographies
are arranged alphabetically by authors’ last names: the family name of the first author comes first, and subsequent
authors in normal order, e.g. Flintstone, Frederick and Barnaby Rubble, Of Rocks and Dinosaurs.
Bibliography to accompany the preceding notes:
Lawrence, Mark A. “Mission Intolerable: Harrison Salisbury’s Trip to Hanoi.” Pacific Historical Review, 75 (August
2006): 429-458.
Salisbury, Harrison. A Journey for Our
Times: A Memoir. New York: Harper & Row, 1983.
___. ‘Without Fear or Favor’: The New
York Times and its Times. New York: Times Books, 1996.
Shepard, Richard F. The Paper’s Papers: A
Reporter’s Journey Through the Archives of the New York Times. New York:
Times Books, 1996.
Talese, Gay. The Kingdom and the Power.
2nd ed. New York: Ivy Press, 1992.
Tifft, Susan E. and Alex S. Jones. The
Trust: the Private and Powerful Family behind the New York Times. Boston:
Little Brown, 1999.
In
footnotes containing repeated citations of the same source, current practice
prefers the author’s last name and page. If you cite multiple works by the same
author, use a shortened version of the title, such as Talese, Kingdom, followed by a page number, as
shown above. The older forms of
citation, ibid. and loc. cit. are no longer used.
Footnotes to websites
Give
author, title, URL address, <date posted> and (date accessed). For
example: Harry Hopkins, Work Relief Administration Press Conference, 11 June
1934, New Deal Network, http://newdeal.feri.org/workrelief/hop06.htm, <posted
7/14/02> (accessed 8/23/05).
Developing Your Own Voice
As
teachers of history, we want students to develop their own ideas and the
ability to express them. A distinctive voice is one of the most important
things a college education can give you. Studying history is an excellent way
to develop your voice. Contrary to popular belief, history is not just a series
of dates and facts without argument or analytical framework. History involves reflection
about past events, their people involved, their causes, and their significance.
No history professor wants a student simply to repeat what he or she has been
read or told. We want to see students creatively considering the issue at hand
and reframing it. Originality draws upon ideas and information from other
sources but requires that you put them together in a novel, distinctive and
coherent way.
Proper
citation allows you to separate what you know and think from what others have
said, so that readers can appreciate the power of your ideas. It reveals where
you got your information and enables your readers to trust you as a reliable
writer. All scholarship depends on that trust. Without it, without good
citations that can be traced to the sources you have used, your work is
something else: fiction, propaganda, lies, deception, or fantasy. For your
citations to be effective, you have to know when to use them. You don’t have to
use them for widely known facts (example: “George Washington was the first
president of the United States.”). You must cite when you put lesser-known
information into your paper (the population of the U.S. in 1800, say), or use
someone else’s words, ideas, or analytical framework. The citation lets you
show the reader that you have done your research and marks those findings of
from your own thoughts and interpretations of that research. It also lets
readers verify and follow up on your claims. Without citations, your voice gets
lost.
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