Tuesday, August 11, 2020
Chicago Manual of Style 17th Edition Whats New
Chicago Manual of Style 17th Edition Whatâs New (1) Fall is here, and so are the winds of change for the Chicago Manual of Style (CMoS)! This past September, a new edition of the CMoS was released. It tackles some new topics, while also expanding on existing citation specifications. Here is a list of the biggest changes in the 17th edition of CMoS: Titles for Websites In a departure from the 16th edition, the formatting for titles of websites can now be treated in various ways. What dictates the treatment is whether the website also has a print counterpart, such as newspaper websites. If the site has one, the title is in italics. If it does not, then it is not stylized. Title examples: The New York Times Wikipedia Forbes Buzzfeed Use of âibid.â In previous versions of CMoS, the abbreviation âibidâ was used in footnotes to show the reader that the previous cited source is being cited immediately after. The 17th edition, however, discourages the use of âibidâ in favor of shortened citations. The footnote can instead start with the authorâs last name, and include the page number. Here are some example congruent footnote citations without âibid.â: Steven T. Brown, Tokyo Cyberpunk: Posthumanism in Japanese Visual Culture (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010), 124. Brown, 11. Brown, 17. Repeating the Year in Certain Author-date Citations Chicago Manual of Style has two main sub-styles: âauthor-dateâ and âfootnote-bibliography.â In an author-date reference list entry, the year may now be repeated for sources that are also identified by month and day, such as journals or websites. This, however, is optional. Examples: Germano, William. 2017. âFuturist Shock.â Lingua Franca (blog). Chronicle of Higher Education, February 15, 2017. http://www.chronicle.com/blogs/linguafranca/2017/02/15/futurist-shock/. New York Times. 2002. âIn Texas, Ad Heats Up Race for Governor.â July 30, 2002.
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