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

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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 19.1.2).R: Daniels, Roger. 2002. Coming to America: A history <strong>of</strong> immigration <strong>and</strong> ethnicity in American life.2nd ed. New York: Harper Perennial.Babb, Florence. 1989. 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.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 19.1.10). 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 in yourreference list that it is a reprint, especially if it was published more than a year or two after theoriginal edition. In this case, treat the date <strong>of</strong> the reprint as the publication date, <strong>and</strong> includethe date <strong>of</strong> the original (see 19.1.2) in paren<strong>theses</strong> in the reference list entry.R: Fay, Peter Ward. 1997. The Opium War, 1840–1842. Chapel Hill: University <strong>of</strong> North Carolina Press.(Orig. pub. 1975.)P: (Fay 1997, 67–68)If the reprint is a modern printing <strong>of</strong> a classic work, you should still cite the reprint edition,but if the original publication date is important in the context <strong>of</strong> your paper, include it inbrackets be<strong>for</strong>e the reprint date in both your reference list <strong>and</strong> your parenthetical citations.orR: Emerson, Ralph Waldo. 1985. Nature. Boston: Beacon. (Orig. pub. 1836.)P: (Emerson 1985, 10)R: Emerson, Ralph Waldo. [1836] 1985. Nature. Boston: Beacon.P: (Emerson [1836] 1985, 10)19.1.5 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.R: Pelikan, Jaroslav. 1989. 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.If the volumes are not individually titled <strong>and</strong> you are citing only one <strong>of</strong> them, add thevolume number to the reference list entry. (See below <strong>for</strong> citing a multivolume work as awww.itpub.net

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