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A-manual-for-writers-of-research-papers-theses-and-dissertations

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The term edition has several meanings, all based on the fact that some works are publishedmore than once with changes in content <strong>and</strong>/or <strong>for</strong>mat. If you cite a book published in morethan one edition, always indicate which edition you consulted because editions may differ. (Ifnone <strong>of</strong> the markers described below apply to a book, you can assume it is a first edition, afact that is not cited.)REVISED EDITIONS. When a book is reissued with significant content changes, it may becalled a “revised” edition or a “second” (or subsequent) edition. This in<strong>for</strong>mation usuallyappears on the book's title page <strong>and</strong> is repeated, along with the date <strong>of</strong> the edition, on thecopyright page.When you cite an edition other than the first, include the number or description <strong>of</strong> theedition after the title. Abbreviate such wording as “Second Edition, Revised <strong>and</strong> Enlarged” as2nd ed.; abbreviate “Revised Edition” as rev. ed. Include the publication date only <strong>of</strong> theedition you are citing, not <strong>of</strong> any previous editions (see 17.1.6).N: 1. Paul J. Bolt, Damon V. Coletta, <strong>and</strong> Collins G. Shackel<strong>for</strong>d Jr., American Defense Policy, 8th ed.(Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2005), 157–58.B: Daniels, Roger. Coming to America: A History <strong>of</strong> Immigration <strong>and</strong> Ethnicity in American Life. 2nd ed.New York: Harper Perennial, 2002.Babb, Florence. Between Field <strong>and</strong> Cooking Pot: The Political Economy <strong>of</strong> Marketwomen in Peru. Rev.ed. Austin: University <strong>of</strong> Texas Press, 1989.REPRINT EDITIONS. A book may also be reissued in a new <strong>for</strong>mat—<strong>for</strong> example, in apaperback edition (by the original publisher or a different publisher), or in electronic <strong>for</strong>m(see 17.1.10). Even though the contents <strong>of</strong> the book might be minimally changed from theoriginal, cite the reprint edition if you consulted it. You may wish to indicate that it is areprint, especially if it was published more than a year or two after the original edition or is amodern printing <strong>of</strong> a classic work. In this case, include the publication dates <strong>of</strong> both theoriginal <strong>and</strong> the edition you are citing (see 17.1.6).N: 23. Peter Ward Fay, The Opium War, 1840–1842 (1975; repr., Chapel Hill: University <strong>of</strong> North CarolinaPress, 1997), 67–68.B: Emerson, Ralph Waldo. Nature. 1836. Reprint, Boston: Beacon, 1985.17.1.4 VolumeIf a book is part <strong>of</strong> a multivolume work, include this in<strong>for</strong>mation in your citations.SPECIFIC VOLUME. How you cite a specific volume in a multivolume work depends onwhether the volume has a title different from the work as a whole. If so, list the title <strong>of</strong> thespecific volume, followed by both the volume number <strong>and</strong> the general title. Abbreviate vol.<strong>and</strong> use arabic numbers <strong>for</strong> volume numbers.N: 10. Jaroslav Pelikan, Christian Doctrine <strong>and</strong> Modern Culture (Since 1700), vol. 5 <strong>of</strong> The ChristianTradition: A History <strong>of</strong> the Development <strong>of</strong> Doctrine (Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1989), 16.

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