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

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with Harry N. Abrams, 1998. Published in conjunction with the exhibition “Mary Cassatt: ModernWoman” shown at the Boston Museum <strong>of</strong> Fine Arts, the National Gallery in Washington, DC, <strong>and</strong> theArt Institute <strong>of</strong> Chicago.PLAYS. In some cases, you can cite well-known English-language plays in notes only. (Seealso 17.5.1.). Omit publication data, <strong>and</strong> cite passages by act <strong>and</strong> scene (or other division)instead <strong>of</strong> by page number.N: 22. Eugene O'Neill, Long Day's Journey into Night, act 2, scene 1.If your paper is in literary studies or another field concerned with close analysis <strong>of</strong> texts, orif you are citing a translation or an obscure work, cite every play as you would a book, <strong>and</strong>include it in your bibliography. Cite passages either by division or by page, according to yourlocal guidelines.N: 25. Enid Bagnold, The Chalk Garden (New York: R<strong>and</strong>om House, 1953), 8–9.B: Anouilh, Jean. Becket, or the Honor <strong>of</strong> God. Translated by Lucienne Hill. New York: RiverheadBooks, 1996.MUSICAL SCORES. Cite a published musical score as you would a book.N: 1. Giuseppe Verdi, Il corsaro (melodramma tragico in three acts), libretto by Francesco Maria Piave, ed.Elizabeth Hudson, 2 vols., The Works <strong>of</strong> Giuseppe Verdi, ser. 1, Operas (Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> ChicagoPress; Milan: G. Ricordi, 1998).B: Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus. Sonatas <strong>and</strong> Fantasies <strong>for</strong> the Piano. Prepared from the autographs <strong>and</strong>earliest printed sources by Nathan Broder. Rev. ed. Bryn Mawr, PA: Theodore Presser, 1960.Cite an unpublished score as you would unpublished material in manuscript collections.N: 2. Ralph Shapey, “Partita <strong>for</strong> Violin <strong>and</strong> Thirteen Players,” score, 1966, Special Collections, JosephRegenstein Library, University <strong>of</strong> Chicago.17.9 Public DocumentsPublic documents include a wide array <strong>of</strong> sources produced by governments at all levelsthroughout the world. This section presents basic principles <strong>for</strong> some common types <strong>of</strong> publicdocuments available in English; if you need to cite other types, adapt the closest model.Such documents involve more complicated <strong>and</strong> varied elements than published sources. Inyour citations, include as much identifying in<strong>for</strong>mation as you can, <strong>for</strong>mat the elementsconsistently, <strong>and</strong> adapt the general patterns outlined here as needed.The bulk <strong>of</strong> this section is concerned with documents published by U.S. governmentalbodies <strong>and</strong> agencies. For documents published by the governments <strong>of</strong> Canada <strong>and</strong> the UnitedKingdom <strong>and</strong> by international bodies, see 17.9.9–17.9.11. For unpublished governmentdocuments, see 17.9.12.17.9.1 Elements to Include, Their Order, <strong>and</strong> How to Format Themwww.itpub.net

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