Chicago Style of Writing Papers

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Welcome to the Purdue OWL
This page is brought to you by the OWL at Purdue
(https://owl.english.purdue.edu/). When printing this page, you must
include the entire legal notice at bottom.
Contributors:Jessica Clements, Elizabeth Angeli, Karen Schiller, S. C. Gooch, Laurie
Pinkert, Allen Brizee.
Summary:
This section contains information on The Chicago Manual of Style method of document
formatting and citation. These resources follow the sixteenth edition of The Chicago
Manual of Style, which was issued in September 2010.
Chicago Manual of Style 16th Edition
Please note that while these resources reflect the most recent updates in the 16
th
edition of
The Chicago Manual of Style concerning documentation practices, you can review a full
list of updates concerning usage, technology, professional practice, etc. at The Chicago
Manual of Style Online.
To see a side-by-side comparison of the three most widely used citation styles, including a
chart of all CMS citation guidelines, see the Citation Style Chart.
Introduction
The Chicago Manual of Style (CMS) covers a variety of topics from manuscript
preparation and publication to grammar, usage, and documentation and has been lovingly
called the “editors’ bible.” The material in this resource focuses primarily on one of the
two CMS documentation styles: the Notes-Bibliography System (NB), which is used by
those in literature, history, and the arts. The other documentation style, the Author-Date
System, is nearly identical in content but slightly different in form and is preferred in the
social/sciences.
In addition to consulting the The Chicago Manual of Style (16th ed.) for more information,
students may also find it useful to consult Kate L. Turabian's Manual for Writers of
Research Papers, Theses, and Dissertations (8th ed.). This manual, which presents what
is commonly known as the "Turabian" citation style, follows the two CMS patterns of
documentation but offers slight modifications suited to student texts.
Notes and bibliography (NB) in Chicago style
The Chicago NB system is often used in the humanities and provides writers with a system
for referencing their sources through footnote or endnote citation in their writing and
through bibliography pages. It also offers writers an outlet for commenting on those cited
sources. The NB system is most commonly used in the discipline of history.
The proper use of the NB system can protect writers from accusations of plagiarism, which
is the intentional or accidental uncredited use of source material created by others. Most
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importantly, properly using the NB system builds credibility by demonstrating
accountability to source material.
If you are asked to use the Chicago NB format, be sure to consult The Chicago Manual of
Style (16th ed.) and/or A Manual for Writers of Research Papers, Theses, and
Dissertations (7th ed.). Both are available in most writing centers and reference libraries
and in bookstores.
Introduction to notes
In the NB system, you should include a note (endnote or footnote) each time you use a
source, whether through a direct quote or through a paraphrase or summary. Footnotes will
be added at the end of the page on which the source is referenced, and endnotes will be
compiled at the end of each chapter or at the end of the entire document.
In either case, a superscript number corresponding to a note with the bibliographic
information for that source should be placed in the text following the end of the sentence
or clause in which the source is referenced.
The first note for each source should include all relevant information about the source:
author’s full name, source title, and facts of publication. If you cite the same source again,
the note need only include the surname of the author, a shortened form of the title (if more
than four words), and page number(s).
If you cite the same source and page number(s) from a single source two or more times
consecutively, the corresponding note should use the word “Ibid.,” an abbreviated form of
the Latin ibidem, which means “in the same place.” If you use the same source but a
different page number, the corresponding note should use “Ibid.” followed by a comma
and the new page number(s).
In the NB system, the footnote or endnote itself begins with the appropriate number
followed by a period and then a space. In Turabian style, the footnote or endnote begins
with a superscript number.
Introduction to bibliographies
In the NB system, the bibliography provides an alphabetical list of all sources used in a
given work. This page, most often titled Bibliography, is usually placed at the end of the
work preceding the index. It should include all sources cited within the work and may
sometimes include other relevant sources that were not cited but provide further reading.
Although bibliographic entries for various sources may be formatted differently, all
included sources (books, articles, Web sites, etc.) are arranged alphabetically by author’s
last name. If no author or editor is listed, the title or keyword by which the reader would
search for the source may be used instead.
Common Elements
All entries in the bibliography will include the author (or editor, compiler, translator), title,
and publication information.
Author’s Names
The author’s name is inverted in the bibliography, placing the last name first and
separating the last name and first name with a comma; for example, John Smith becomes
Smith, John. (If an author is not listed first, this applies to compilers, translators, etc.)
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Titles
Titles of books and journals are italicized. Titles of articles, chapters, poems, etc. are
placed in quotation marks.
Publication Information
The year of publication is listed after the publisher or journal name.
Punctuation
In a bibliography, all major elements are separated by periods.
For more information and specific examples see the sections on Books and Periodicals.
Please note that this OWL resource provides basic information regarding the formatting of
entries used in the bibliography. For more information about Selected Bibliographies,
Annotated Bibliographies, and Bibliographic Essays, please consult Chapter 14.59 of The
Chicago Manual of Style.
Contributors:Jessica Clements, Elizabeth Angeli, Karen Schiller, S. C. Gooch, Laurie
Pinkert, Allen Brizee.
Summary:
This section contains information on The Chicago Manual of Style method of document
formatting and citation. These resources follow the sixteenth edition of The Chicago
Manual of Style, which was issued in September 2010.
General Format
Please use the example at the bottom of this page to cite the Purdue OWL in CMS.
To see a side-by-side comparison of the three most widely used citation style, including a
chart of all CMS citation guidelines, see the Citation Style Chart.
General CMS Guidelines
Margins should be set at no less than 1” and no greater than 1.5”.
Typeface should be something readable, such as Times New Roman or Palatino.
Font size should be no less than 10 pt. (preferably, 12 pt.).
Text should be consistently double-spaced, with the following exceptions:
Block quotations, table titles, and figure captions should be single-spaced.
A prose quotation of five or more lines should be blocked.
A blocked quotation does not get enclosed in quotation marks.
An extra line space should immediately precede and follow a blocked
quotation.
Blocked quotations should be indented .5” as a whole.
Notes and bibliographies should be singled-spaced internally; however, leave an
extra line space between note and bibliographic entries.
Page numbers begin in the header of the first page of text with Arabic number 1.
Subheadings should be used for longer papers.
CMS recommends you devise your own format but use consistency as your
guide.
For Turabian’s recommendations, see “Headings,” below.
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Put an extra line space before and after subheadings, and avoid ending them with
periods.
Major Paper Sections
Title Page
Class papers will either include a title page or include the title on the first page of the
text. Use the following guidelines should your instructor or context require a title
page:
The title should be centered a third of the way down the page.
Your name and class information should follow several lines later.
For subtitles, end the title line with a colon and place the subtitle on the line
below the title.
Image Caption: CMS Title Page
Different practices apply for theses and dissertation (see Kate L. Turabian’s A
Manual for Writers of Research Papers, Theses, ad Dissertations [7
th
ed.],
373-408).
Main Body
Titles mentioned in the text, notes, or bibliography are capitalized “headline-style,”
meaning first words of titles and subtitles and any important words thereafter should
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be capitalized.
Titles in the text as well as in notes and bibliographies are treated with quotation
marks or italics based on the type of work they name.
Book and periodical titles (titles of larger works) should be italicized.
Article and chapter titles (titles of shorter works) should be enclosed in double
quotation marks.
Otherwise, take a minimalist approach to capitalization.
Lowercase terms used to describe periods, for example, except in the
case of proper nouns (e.g., “the colonial period,” vs. “the Victorian
era”).
A prose quotation of five or more lines should be “blocked.” The block quotation is
singled-spaced and takes no quotation marks, but you should leave an extra line
space immediately before and after. Indent the entire quotation .5” (the same as you
would the start of a new paragraph).
Rose eloquently sums up his argument in the following quotation:
In a society of control, a politics of conduct is
designed into the fabric of existence itself, into the
organization of space, time, visibility, circuits of
communication. And these enwrap each individual life
decision and action—about labour [sic], purchases, debts,
credits, lifestyle, sexual contracts and the like—in a web
of incitements, rewards, current sanctions and foreboding
of future sanctions which serve to enjoin citizens to
maintain particular types of control over their conduct.
These assemblages which entail the securitization of
identity are not unified, but dispersed, not hierarchical
but rhizomatic, not totalized but connected in a web or
relays and relations.(246)
References
Label the first page of your back matter, and your comprehensive list of sources,
“Bibliography” (for Notes and Bibliography style) or “References” (for Author Date
style).
Leave two blank lines between “Bibliography” or “References” and your first
entry.
Leave one blank line between remaining entries.
List entries in letter-by-letter alphabetical order according to the first word in each
entry.
Use “and,” not an ampersand, “&,” for multi-author entries.
For two to three authors, write out all names.
For four to ten authors, write out all names in the bibliography but only the
first author’s name plus “et al.” in notes and parenthetical citations.
When a source has no identifiable author, cite it by its title, both on the
references page and in shortened form (up to four keywords from that title) in
parenthetical citations throughout the text.
Write out publishers’ names in full.
Do not use access dates unless publication dates are unavailable.
If you cannot ascertain the publication date of a printed work, use the
abbreviation “n.d.”
Provide DOIs instead of URLs whenever possible.
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If you cannot name a specific page number when called for, you have other
options: section (sec.), equation (eq.), volume (vol.), or note (n.).
Image Caption: CMS References Page

Footnotes
Note numbers should begin with “1” and follow consecutively throughout a given
paper.
In the text, note numbers are superscripted.
Note numbers should be placed at the end of the clause or sentence to which
they refer and should be placed after any and all punctuation.
In the notes themselves, note numbers are full-sized, not raised, and followed
by a period (superscripting note numbers in the notes themselves is also
acceptable).
The first line of a footnote is indented .5” from the left margin.
Subsequent lines within a footnote should be formatted flush left.
Leave an extra line space between footnotes.
Place commentary after documentation when a footnote contains both,
separated by a period.
In parenthetical citation, separate documentation from brief
commentary with a semicolon.
Do not repeat the hundreds digit in a page range if it does not change
from the beginning to the end of the range.
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For more information on footnotes, please see CMS NB Sample Paper.
Headings
Chicago has an optional system of five heading levels.
Chicago Headings
LevelFormat
1 Centered, Boldface or Italic Type, Headline-style
Capitalization
2 Centered, Regular Type, Headline-style Capitalization
3 Flush Left, Boldface or Italic Type, Headline-style
Capitalization
4 Flush left, roman type, sentence-style capitalization
5 Run in at beginning of paragraph (no blank line
after), boldface or italic type, sentence-style
capitalization, terminal period.
Here is an example of the five-level heading system:
Image Caption: CMS Headings

Tables and Figures
Position tables and figures after the paragraph in which they’re described.
Cite the source of the table and figure information with a “source line” at the bottom
of the table or figure.
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Source lines are introduced by the word Source(s), followed by a colon, and
ended with a period.
Cite a source as you would for parenthetical citation, minus the parentheses,
and include full information in an entry on your References page.
Acknowledge reproduced or adapted sources appropriately (i.e., data adapted
from; map by . . . ).
Every table should have a number and (a short and descriptive) title flush left
on the line above the table.
Every figure should have a number and a caption flush left on the line below
the figure.
Number tables and figures separately in the order you mention them in the
text.
In the text, identify tables and figures by number (“in figure 3”) rather
than by location (“below”).
How to Cite the Purdue OWL in CMS
Contributors’ names and the last edited date can be found in the orange boxes at the top of
every page on the OWL.
Footnote or Endnote (N):
1. Contributors’ Names, “Title of Resource,” List the OWL as Publishing
Organization/Web Site Name in Italics, last edited date, http://owl.english.purdue.edu
/owl/resource/717/13/.
1. Jessica Clements, Elizabeth Angeli, Karen Schiller, S. C. Gooch, Laurie Pinkert, and
Allen Brizee. “General Format,” The Purdue OWL, October 12, 2011,
http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/717/13/.
Corresponding Bibliographical Entry (B):
Name, Contributor 1, Contributor 2 Name, and Contributor 3 (etc.) Name. “Title of
Resource.”
List the OWL as Publishing Organization/Web Site Name in Italics. Last edited date.
http://Web address for OWL resource.

Clements, Jessica, Elizabeth Angeli, Karen Schiller, S. C. Gooch, Laurie Pinkert, and Allen
Brizee. “General Format.” The Purdue OWL. October 12, 2011.
http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/717/13/.
Author Date In-text Citation:
(Contributors’ Surnames year of publication, page or section number when available).
(Clements et al. 2011).
Author Date References Page Citation:
Name, Contributor 1, Contributor 2 Name, and Contributor 3 Name. Year of Publication.
“Title of Resource.” List the OWL as Publishing Organization/Web Site Name in
Italics, Month and date last edited. http://Web address for OWL resource.
Clements, Jessica, Elizabeth Angeli, Karen Schiller, S. C. Gooch, Laurie Pinkert, and Allen
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Brizee. 2011. “General Format.” The Purdue OWL, October 12.
http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/717/13/
Contributors:Jessica Clements, Elizabeth Angeli, Karen Schiller, S. C. Gooch, Laurie
Pinkert, Allen Brizee.
Summary:
This section contains information on The Chicago Manual of Style method of document
formatting and citation. These resources follow the sixteenth edition of The Chicago
Manual of Style, which was issued in September 2010.
Books
General Model for Citing Books in the Chicago Notes and Bibliography
System
Footnote or endnote (N):

1. Firstname Lastname, Title of Book (Place of publication: Publisher, Year of
publication), page number.

Corresponding bibliographical entry (B):
Lastname, Firstname. Title of Book. Place of publication: Publisher, Year of publication.
Book by One Author
N:

1. William Faulkner, Absalom, Absalom! (New York: Vintage Books, 1990), 271.

B:
Faulkner, William. Absalom, Absalom!. New York: Vintage Books, 1990.
Book by Multiple Authors
N:

2. Scott Lash and John Urry, Economies of Signs & Space (London: Sage Publications,
1994), 241-51.

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B:
Lash, Scott, and John Urry. Economies of Signs & Space. London: Sage Publications,
1994.
Translated Work with One Author
N:

3. Julio Cortázar, Hopscotch, trans. Gregory Rabassa (New York: Pantheon Books,
1966), 165.

B:
Cortázar, Julio. Hopscotch. Translated by Gregory Rabassa. New York: Pantheon Books,
1966.
Book with Author and Editor
N:

4. Edward B. Tylor, Researches into the Early Development of Mankind and the
Development of Civilization, ed. Paul Bohannan (Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
1964), 194.

B:
Tylor, Edward B. Researches into the Early Development of Mankind and the
Development of Civilization, Edited by Paul Bohannan. Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 1964.
Article, Chapter, Essay, Short Story, etc., in an Edited Collection
N:

5. Peter Chilson, "The Border," in The Best American Travel Writing 2008, ed. Anthony
Bourdain (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2008), 46.

B:
Chilson, Peter. "The Border." In The Best American Travel Writing 2008, edited by
Anthony Bourdain, 44-51. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2008.
Introduction in a Book
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N:
6. Steven Pinker, introduction to What is Your Dangerous Idea?, ed. John Brockman
(New York: Harper Perennial, 2007), xxv.
B:
Pinker, Steven. Introduction to What is Your Dangerous Idea?, Edited by John Brockman.
New York: Harper Perennial, 2007.
Anonymous Works-Unknown Authorship
Sources that have no known author or editor should be cited by title. Follow the basic
format for "Footnote or Endnote" and "Corresponding Bibliographical Entry" that are
exemplified above omitting author and/or editor names and beginning respective entries
with the title of the source.
Citing Indirect Sources
Because authors are generally expected to be intimately familiar with the sources they are
citing, Chicago discourages the use of a source that was cited within another (secondary)
source. In the case that an original source is utterly unavailable, however, Chicago
recommends the use of "quoted in" for the note:
N:
7. Ian Hacking, The Social Construction of What? (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University
Press, 1999), 103, quoted in Manuel DeLanda, A New Philosophy of Society (New York:
Continuum, 2006), 2.
Contributors:Jessica Clements, Elizabeth Angeli, Karen Schiller, S. C. Gooch, Laurie
Pinkert, Allen Brizee.
Summary:
This section contains information on The Chicago Manual of Style method of document
formatting and citation. These resources follow the sixteenth edition of The Chicago
Manual of Style, which was issued in September 2010.
Periodicals
Periodicals include printed journals, electronic journals, magazines, and newspapers.
Citations for these sources should include enough information for the reader to find the
resource in a library or a database. Thus, dates are essential (month, day, and year for
magazines and newspapers and volume and year plus month or issue number for journals).
In notes, the major elements are separated by commas; in the bibliography, these elements
are separated by periods.
Journals
Notes and bibliographic entries for a journal include the following: author’s name, article
title, journal title and issue information. Issue information refers to volume, issue number,
month, year, and page numbers. For online works, retrieval information and the date of
access are also included.
Author’s Name:
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Notes include the author’s name as listed in the article. Bibliographic entries, however,
invert the author’s name.
Article Title:
Both notes and bibliographies use quotation marks to set off the titles of articles within the
journal.
Journal Title:
Journal titles may omit an initial “The” but should otherwise be given in full, capitalized
(headline-style), and italicized.
Issue Information:
The volume number follows the journal title with no punctuation and is not italicized. The
issue number (if it is given) is separated from the volume number with a comma and is
preceded by “no.” The year appears in parenthesis after the volume number (or issue
number if given). The year may be preceded by a specific date, month, or season if given.
Page information follows the year. For notes, page number(s) refer only to the cited
material; the bibliography includes the first and last pages of the article.
N:
1. Susan Peck MacDonald, “The Erasure of Language,” College Composition and
Communication 58, no. 4 (2007): 619.
B:
MacDonald, Susan Peck. “The Erasure of Language.” College Composition and
Communication 58, no. 4 (2007): 585-625.
Electronic Journals
Citing electronic journals generally follows the same format for printed periodicals, which
is explained in the Journals section. Additionally, entries include the DOI or URL (DOIs
are preferred). The date accessed may also be included, especially if the material is time
sensitive, but it is not required by Chicago in citations of formally published electronic
sources. The access date may be included immediately prior to the DOI or URL and, if
included, should be separated by commas in notes or periods in bibliographical entries.
Dates:
Even if weekly or monthly magazines are numbered by volume or issue, they are cited by
date only. When following the CMS Note and Bibliography style, the year is presented as
shown in the examples below. When following the CMS Author Date style, the date is
essential to the citation and it is not enclosed in parentheses.
Departments:
Regular department titles are capitalized headline-style but not put in quotation marks.
Page Numbers:
Citations for magazine articles may include a specific page number. Inclusive page
numbers for the entire article are often omitted in bibliographical entries, however,
because the pages of the article are often separated by many pages of unrelated material.
If page numbers are included, they should follow the date and be preceded by a colon.
N:
1. Henry E. Bent, “Professionalization of the Ph.D. Degree,” College Composition and
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Communication 58, no. 4 (2007): 141, accessed December 5, 2008,
http://www.jstor.org/stable/1978286.
B:
Bent, Henry E. "Professionalization of the Ph.D. Degree.” College Composition and
Communication 58, no. 4 (2007): 0-145. Accessed December 5, 2008.
http://www.jstor.org/stable/1978286.

Magazines
Notes and bibliographic entries for magazines include the following information: author’s
name, article title, magazine title, date.
N:
1. Emily Macel, “Beijing’s Modern Movement,” Dance Magazine, February 2009, 35.
B:
Macel, Emily. “Beijing’s Modern Movement.” Dance Magazine, February 2009.
Online Magazines
Notes and bibliographic entries for online magazines should follow the relevant examples
for printed magazines. Additionally, online magazine entries should also contain the DOI
or URL.
Note: In the examples below, Green Room is not placed in quotation marks because it is
the department title rather than the article title.
Access Date:
If an access date is necessary, the access date should be included in parentheses at the end
of the citation. Access dates are used for time-sensitive details and may be required by
certain publishers or disciplines.
N:
1. Barron YoungSmith, Green Room, Slate, February 4, 2009, http://www.slate.com
/id/2202431/.
B:
YoungSmith, Barron. Green Room. Slate, February 4, 2009. http://www.slate.com
/id/2202431/.
Newspapers
Notes and bibliographic entries for newspapers should include the following: name of the
author (if listed), headline or column heading, newspaper name, month (often
abbreviated), day, and year. Since issues may include several editions, page numbers are
usually omitted. If an online edition of a newspaper is consulted, the URL should be added
at the end of the citation.
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Names of Newspapers:
If the name of a newspaper begins with “The,” this word is omitted. For American
newspapers that are not well-known, a city name should be added along with the
newspaper title (see below). Additionally, a state abbreviation may be added in parenthesis
after the city name.
News Services:
News services, such as the Associated Press or the United Press International, are
capitalized but not italicized.
Headlines:
Headlines may be capitalized using “headline style,” in which all major words are
capitalized, or “sentence style,” in which only the first word and other proper nouns are
capitalized. Although many major newspapers prefer sentence style,the CMS recommends
headline style for consistency among various types of cited sources.
Regular Columns:
If a regular column is cited, the column name may be included with the article title or, to
save space, the column name may replace the article title.
Citing in Text:
Newspapers are more often cited in text or in notes than in bibliographies. If newspaper
sources are carefully documented in the text, they need not be cited in the bibliography.
N:
1. Nisha Deo, “Visiting Professor Lectures on Photographer,” Exponent (West
Lafayette, IN), Feb. 13, 2009.
B:
Deo, Nisha. “Visiting Professor Lectures on Photographer.” Exponent (West Lafayette,
IN), Feb. 13, 2009.
Contributors:Jessica Clements, Elizabeth Angeli, Karen Schiller, S. C. Gooch, Laurie
Pinkert, Allen Brizee.
Summary:
This section contains information on The Chicago Manual of Style method of document
formatting and citation. These resources follow the sixteenth edition of The Chicago
Manual of Style, which was issued in September 2010.
Web Sources
General Model for Citing Web Sources in Chicago Style
Footnote or Endnote (N):
1. Firstname Lastname, “Title of Web Page,” Publishing Organization or Name of
Website in Italics, publication date and/or access date if available, URL.
Corresponding Bibliographical Entry (B):
Lastname, Firstname. “Title of Web Page.” Publishing Organization or Name of Website
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in Italics. Publication date and/or access date if available. URL.
Electronic Books and Books Consulted Online
Electronic books are cited exactly as their print counterparts with the addition of a media
marker at the end of the citation: Kindle edition, PDF e-book, Microsoft Reader e-book,
Palm e-book, CD-ROM, etc. Books consulted online are also cited exactly as their print
counterparts with the addition of a DOI (or URL) at the end of the citation. See also
Books.
Note: Stable page numbers are not always available in electronic formats; therefore, you
may, instead, include the number of chapter, section, or other easily recognizable locator.
Lemon, Rebecca, Emma Mason, Johnathan Roberts, and Christopher Rowland, ed. The
Blackwell Companion to the Bible in English Literature. West Sussex: Wiley-
Blackwell, 2009. PDF e-book.
N:
1. Grant Ian Thrall, Land Use and Urban Form (New York: Methuen, 1987),
http://www.rri.wvu.edu/WebBook/Thrallbook
/Land%20Use%20and%20Urban%20Form.pdf.
B:
Thrall, Grant Ian. Land Use and Urban Form. New York: Methuen, 1987.
http://www.rri.wvu.edu/WebBook/Thrallbook
/Land%20Use%20and%20Urban%20Form.pdf.
Online Periodicals (Journal, Magazine, and Newspaper Articles)
Online periodicals are cited exactly as their print counterparts with the addition of a DOI
or URL at the end of the citation. See also Periodicals. Also keep in mind that while
access dates are not required for formally published electronic sources (journal articles),
they can be useful for informally published electronic sources or may be required for by
some disciplines for all informally and formally published electronic sources. Access dates
should be located immediately prior to the DOI or URL.
N:
1. Kirsi Peltonen, Noora Ellonen, Helmer B. Larsen, and Karin Helweg-Larsen,
“Parental Violence and Adolescent Mental Health,” European Child & Adolescent
Psychiatry 19, no. 11 (2010): 813-822, doi: 10.1007/s00787-010-0130-8.
B:
Peltonen, Kirsi, Noora Ellonen, Helmer B. Larsen, and Karin Helweg-Larsen. “Parental
Violence and Adolescent Mental Health.” European Child & Adolescent
Psychiatry 19, no. 11 (2010): 813-822. doi: 10.1007/s00787-010-0130-8.
Web Page with Known Author and Date
N:
7. Mister Jalopy, “Effulgence of the North: Storefront Arctic Panorama in Los
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Angeles,” Dinosaurs and Robots, last modified January 30, 2009,
http://www.dinosaursandrobots.com/2009/01/effulgence-of-north-storefront-
arctic.html.
B:
Mister Jalopy. “Effulgence of the North: Storefront Arctic Panorama in Los Angeles.”
Dinosaurs and Robots. Last modified January 30, 2009.
http://www.dinosaursandrobots.com/2009/01/effulgence-of-north-storefront-
arctic.html.
Web Page with Known Date but without Known Author
N:
8. “Illinois Governor Wants to 'Fumigate' State's Government,” CNN.com, last
modified January 30 2009, http://edition.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/01/30
/illinois.governor.quinn/.
B:
"Illinois Governor Wants to 'Fumigate' State's Government.” CNN.com. Last modified
January 30, 2009. http://edition.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/01/30
/illinois.governor.quinn/.
Web Page with Unknown Publication Date and Author
N:
9. “Band,” Casa de Calexico, accessed January 30, 2009,
http://www.casadecalexico.com/band.
B:
“Band.” Casa de Calexico, accessed January 30, 2009. http://www.casadecalexico.com
/band.
Blog
Generally, blog entries and comments are cited only as notes. If you frequently cite a blog,
however, then you may choose to include it in your bibliography. Note: if the word “blog”
is included in the title of the blog, there is no need to repeat it in parentheses after that
title.
N:
1. J. Robert Lennon, “How Do You Revise?,” Ward Six (blog), September 16, 2010 (8:39
a.m.), http://wardsix.blogspot.com/2010/09/how-do-you-revise.html.
2. Susan Woodring, September 17, 2010 (2:31 a.m.), comment on J. Robert Lennon,
“How Do You Revise?,” Ward Six (blog), September 16, 2010 (8:39 a.m.),
http://wardsix.blogspot.com/2010/09/how-do-you-revise.html.
Podcast
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Note: If the word “podcast” is included in the title of the podcast, there is no need to
repeat it enclosed in commas after that title. “Podcast audio” is used below, then, as an
example placeholder and would not necessarily be required for this specific example.
N:
1. Ben Curtis and Marina Diez, Heading to the Costa de la Luz - Notes from Spain
Podcast 71, podcast audio, Notes from Spain: Travel-Life-Culture, MP3, 27:8,
accessed March 30, 2009, http://www.notesfromspain.com/2008/05/22/heading-
to-the- costa-de-la-luz-notes-from-spain-podcast-71/.
B:
Curtis, Ben, and Marina Diez. Heading to the Costa de la Luz - Notes from Spain Podcast
71. Podcast audio. Notes from Spain: Travel-Life-Culture. MP3, 27:8. Accessed
March 30, 2009. http://www.notesfromspain.com/2008/05/22/heading-to-the-
costa-de-la-luz-notes-from-spain-podcast-71/.
Blank Form for Online Multimedia
N:
1. Firstname Lastname of Performer, Writer or Creator, Title of Text, indication of
format/medium, running time, publication date, URL.
B:
Lastname, Firstname of Performer, Writer or Creator. Title of Text. Indication of Medium,
Running Time. Publication Date. URL.
Contributors:Jessica Clements, Elizabeth Angeli, Karen Schiller, S. C. Gooch, Laurie
Pinkert, Allen Brizee.
Summary:
This section contains information on The Chicago Manual of Style method of document
formatting and citation. These resources follow the sixteenth edition of The Chicago
Manual of Style, which was issued in September 2010.
Film and Television
This resource explains how to cite film, television, and other audiovisual materials.
Citations for such recorded media usually include some or all of the following information:
name of the person primarily responsible for the content of the recording (composer,
writer, performer, etc.), a title in quotation marks or italics, recording company or
publisher’s name, identifying number, an indication of medium (DVD, videocassette, etc.),
and a copyright and/or production or performance date. Entries for recorded material
found online should also include a DOI or URL.
General Model for Citing Film, Television, and Other Recorded
Mediums in Chicago Style
Footnote or Endnote (N):
1. Firstname Lastname, Title of Work, Format, directed/performed by Firstname
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Lastname (Original release year; City: Studio/Distributor, Video release year.), Medium.
Corresponding Bibliographical Entry (B):
Lastname, Firstname. Title of Work. Format. Directed/Performed by Firstname Lastname.
Original Release Year. City: Studio/Distributor, Video release year. Medium.
DVD
N:
1. Joe Versus the Volcano, directed by John Patrick Shanley (1990; Burbank, CA:
Warner Home Video, 2002), DVD.
B:
Joe Versus the Volcano. Directed by John Patrick Shanley. 1990. Burbank, CA: Warner
Home Video, 2002. DVD.
Blank Form for Film and Television
N:
1. Group, Composer or Performer, Title, Medium, Recording Company or Publisher,
Catalog Number, Year of Release.
B:
Group, Composer or Performer. Title. Medium. Recording Company
Or
Publisher, Catalog Number. Year of Release.
N:
1. The National (Musical Group). Boxer. Compact Disc. Beggars Banquet Records,
BBQ-252-1. 2007.
Contributors:Jessica Clements, Elizabeth Angeli, Karen Schiller, S. C. Gooch, Laurie
Pinkert, Allen Brizee.
Summary:
This section contains information on The Chicago Manual of Style method of document
formatting and citation. These resources follow the sixteenth edition of The Chicago
Manual of Style, which was issued in September 2010.
Interviews and Personal Communication
In citations for interviews and personal communications, the name of the person
interviewed or the person from whom the communication is received should be listed first.
This is followed by the name of the interviewer or recipient, if given, and supplemented by
details regarding the place and date of the interview/communication. Unpublished
interviews and personal communications (such as face-to-face or telephone conversations,
letters, e-mails, or text messages) are best cited in text or in notes rather than in the
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bibliography. Published interviews should be like periodical articles or book chapters.
Unpublished Interviews
N:
1. Alex Smith (retired plumber) in discussion with the author, January 2009.
2. Harvey Kail, interview by Laurie A. Pinkert, March 15, 2009, interview 45B,
transcript.
Published or Broadcast Interviews
N:
1. Carrie Rodriguez, interview by Cuz Frost, Acoustic Café, 88.3 WGWG FM,
November 20, 2008.
B:
Rodriguez, Carrie. Acoustic Café. By Cuz Frost. 88.3WGWG FM, November 20, 2008.
Personal Communications
N:
1. Patricia Burns, e-mail message to author, December 15, 2008.
Contributors:Jessica Clements, Elizabeth Angeli, Karen Schiller, S. C. Gooch, Laurie
Pinkert, Allen Brizee.
Summary:
This section contains information on The Chicago Manual of Style method of document
formatting and citation. These resources follow the sixteenth edition of The Chicago
Manual of Style, which was issued in September 2010.
Lectures and Papers Presented at
Meetings
This resource covers The Chicago Manual Style guidelines for citing lectures, papers
presented at meetings or poster sessions, and other similar presentations. Such entries often
include the sponsorship, location, and date of the meeting following the title. When such
texts are published, they should be treated like a chapter in a book or article in a journal.
N:
1. Paul Hanstedt, “This is Your Brain on Writing: The Implications of James Zull’s The
Art of Changing the Brain for the Writing Classroom” (presentation, Annual Convention
of the Conference on College Composition and Communication, San Francisco, CA,
March 11-14, 2009).
B:
Hanstedt, Paul. “This is Your Brain on Writing: The Implications of James Zull’s The Art
of Changing the Brain for the Writing Classroom.” Presentation at the Annual
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Convention of the Conference on College Composition and Communication, San
Francisco, CA, March 11-14, 2009.
Contributors:Jessica Clements, Elizabeth Angeli, Karen Schiller, S. C. Gooch, Laurie
Pinkert, Allen Brizee.
Summary:
This section contains information on The Chicago Manual of Style method of document
formatting and citation. These resources follow the sixteenth edition of The Chicago
Manual of Style, which was issued in September 2010.
Public Documents and Unpublished
Materials
Notes and bibliographic entries for public documents, like other documents, should include
the elements needed to locate the items. These essential elements often include the
following:
Country, city, state, county
Legislative body, executive department, court, bureau, board commission or
committee
Subsidiary divisions
Title, if any, of the document or collection
Individual author (editor or compiler), if given
Report number or any other identification necessary or useful in finding the specific
document
Publisher, if different from issuing body
N:
1. Firstname Lastname, “Title of Unpublished Material” (source type identifier, Place of
Publication, year of publication), page number(s).
B:
Lastname, Firstname. “Title of Unpublished Material.” Source type identifier, Place of
Publication, year of publication.
Unpublished Materials: Theses, Dissertations, Presentations, Etc.
Titles of unpublished works should be capitalized and enclosed in quotation marks. In a
note, the identification of a thesis or dissertation, the academic institution, and the date are
enclosed in parentheses. In a bibliographic entry, they are not. Citations for a PhD
dissertation would resemble those below but would replace the words “master’s thesis”
with “PhD diss.”
N:
1. Tara Hostetler, “Bodies at War: Bacteriology and the Carrier Narratives of ‘Typhoid
Mary’” (master’s thesis, Florida State University, 2007), 15-16.
B:
Hostetler, Tara. “Bodies at War: Bacteriology and the Carrier Narratives of ‘Typhoid
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Mary.’” Master’s thesis, Florida State University, 2007.
Contributors:Jessica Clements, Elizabeth Angeli, Karen Schiller, S. C. Gooch, Laurie
Pinkert, Allen Brizee.
Summary:
This section contains information on The Chicago Manual of Style method of document
formatting and citation. These resources follow the sixteenth edition of The Chicago
Manual of Style, which was issued in September 2010.
CMS Author Date Sample Paper
This resource contains the Author Date sample paper for The Chicago Manual of Style
(16
th
ed.). To download the sample paper, select the CMS Author Date Sample Paper PDF
file in the Media box above.
Contributors:Jessica Clements, Elizabeth Angeli, Karen Schiller, S. C. Gooch, Laurie
Pinkert, Allen Brizee.
Summary:
This section contains information on The Chicago Manual of Style method of document
formatting and citation. These resources follow the sixteenth edition of The Chicago
Manual of Style, which was issued in September 2010.
CMS NB Sample Paper
This resource contains the Notes and Bibliography (NB) sample paper for the Chicago
Manual of Style 16th edition. To download the sample paper, select the CMS NB Sample
Paper PDF file in the Media box above.
Contributors:Jessica Clements, Elizabeth Angeli, Karen Schiller, S. C. Gooch, Laurie
Pinkert, Allen Brizee.
Summary:
This section contains information on The Chicago Manual of Style method of document
formatting and citation. These resources follow the sixteenth edition of The Chicago
Manual of Style, which was issued in September 2010.
CMS NB PowerPoint Presentation
Select the CMS NB PowerPoint Presentation link in the Media box above to download
slides that provide a detailed review of the CMS NB citation style.
Contributors:Jessica Clements, Elizabeth Angeli, Karen Schiller, S. C. Gooch, Laurie
Pinkert, Allen Brizee.
Summary:
This section contains information on The Chicago Manual of Style method of document
formatting and citation. These resources follow the sixteenth edition of The Chicago
Manual of Style, which was issued in September 2010.
Purdue OWL https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/owlprint/717/
21 of 23 13/03/2014 11:57 PM
CMS Author Date PowerPoint
Presentation
Select the CMS Author Date PowerPoint Presentation link in the Media box above to
download slides that provide a detailed review of the CMS Author Date citation style.
Contributors:Jessica Clements, Elizabeth Angeli, Karen Schiller, S. C. Gooch, Laurie
Pinkert, Allen Brizee.
Summary:
This section contains information on The Chicago Manual of Style method of document
formatting and citation. These resources follow the sixteenth edition of The Chicago
Manual of Style, which was issued in September 2010.
CMS Author Date Classroom Poster
The CMS Author Date poster at the link below is a printable jpg file you may download
and print out at different sizes for use in classrooms, writing centers, or as a pocket
reference. Please keep in mind that the file size, as a print-quality resource (120 dpi), is
large, so it may take a while to download. You may adjust the print size of the poster from
your print menu. As is, the poster is 27 x 36 inches.
Because the poster is quite large, standard printers cannot print the poster. If you do not
have access to a printer that can print large documents, contact a local print shop to print
the poster. The Purdue OWL cannot grant requests to print and mail posters.
If you do not have access to a print shop to print the poster, please use the resources we
have available here for printing on standard 8.5 x 11 inch paper. Go to resource you
would like to print, scroll down to the bottom of the page, and click "Full Resource for
Printing."
Also please note that the poster only contains basic CMS guidelines. For detailed
instructions, please see the complete OWL CMS resources here.
The Purdue OWL CMS Author Date Classroom Poster was developed by Megan
Lancaster for the Purdue Professional Writing - Editing and Publishing class, English 515,
in spring 2011.
Purdue OWL CMS Author Date Classroom Poster (Please note: The poster is best
viewed in Firefox.)
Contributors:Jessica Clements, Elizabeth Angeli, Karen Schiller, S. C. Gooch, Laurie
Pinkert, Allen Brizee.
Summary:
This section contains information on The Chicago Manual of Style method of document
formatting and citation. These resources follow the sixteenth edition of The Chicago
Manual of Style, which was issued in September 2010.
CMS NB Classroom Poster
Purdue OWL https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/owlprint/717/
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The CMS Notes and Bibliography (NB) poster at the link below is a printable jpg file you
may download and print out at different sizes for use in classrooms, writing centers, or as a
pocket reference. Please keep in mind that the file size, as a print-quality resource (120
dpi), is large, so it may take a while to download. You may adjust the print size of the
poster from your print menu. As is, the poster is 27 x 36 inches.
Because the poster is quite large, standard printers cannot print the poster. If you do not
have access to a printer that can print large documents, contact a local print shop to print
the poster. The Purdue OWL cannot grant requests to print and mail posters.
If you do not have access to a print shop to print the poster, please use the resources we
have available here for printing on standard 8.5 x 11 inch paper. Go to resource you
would like to print, scroll down to the bottom of the page, and click "Full Resource for
Printing."
Also please note that the poster only contains basic CMS guidelines. For detailed
instructions, please see the complete OWL CMS resources here.
The Purdue OWL CMS NB Classroom Poster was developed by Megan Lancaster for the
Purdue Professional Writing - Editing and Publishing class, English 515, in spring 2011.
Purdue OWL CMS NB Classroom Poster (Please note: The poster is best viewed in
Firefox.)
Purdue OWL https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/owlprint/717/
23 of 23 13/03/2014 11:57 PM

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