PRINT RESOURCES      ELECTRONIC RESOURCES      Footnotes

Other Styles

TURABIAN – PRINT RESOURCES

BOOKS

Books (Books with one author) Author’s name {last name first}. Title of Book. Place of publication: publisher, date.

  • Thomas, Cal. The Things That Matter Most. New York: HarperCollins, 1994.

(Books with more than one author) First author’s name {last name first}, other author’s name(s) {first name first}. Title of Book.
Place of publication: Publisher, date.

  • Urban, Glen L., and Steven H. Star. Advanced Marketing Strategy: Phenomena, Analysis and Decisions. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1991.

(Books with no author) Title of Book. Place of publication: Publisher, date.

  • Managing Global Portfolios. London: Euromoney Publications, 1989.

CHAPTER, ESSAY, STORY or POEM IN A BOOK

Author’s name, {last name first}. “Title of Item Cited.” In Title of Book, ed(itor) of book, pages. Place of publication:
publisher, date.

  • Dometrius, Nelson C. “The Power of the (Empty) Purse.” In Gubernatorial Leadership and State Policy. ed. Eric B. Herzik and Brent W. Brown, 93-103. New York: Greenwood Press, 1991.

ENCYCLOPEDIA ARTICLE

Title of Encyclopedia, date of the edition S. v. “Title of Article,” by author’s name, if available. (Volume and page numbers may be omitted, since the S. v. indicates the alphabetical arrangement of the encyclopedia.)

  • World Book Encyclopedia, 1993 ed. S. v. “Women’s Movements,” by Janet Zollinger Giele.
  • Encyclopedia Americana, 1992 ed. S. v. “Junk Art.”

MAGAZINE or JOURNAL ARTICLE

Author’s name, if available {last name first}, “Title of Article,” Title of Periodical volume & number (date) or date only {as appropriate}, pages.

  • Hornblower, Margot, “Hot Lines and Hot Tempers,” Time, 28 Nov. 1994, 36.
  • “Revised Diagnostic Subgroupings for Anorexia Nervosa,” Nutrition Reviews 52 no.4 (1994): 213-16.

NEWSPAPER ARTICLE

Author’s Name, if available {last name first}, “Title of Article,” Name of Newspaper, date, section letter {or number}, page number (upper case letter indicating edition).

  • Herbert, Bob, “Gingrich Mugs the Crime Bill,” New York Times, 17 August 1994, sec. A, p. 19(L).
  • “Goldman Sachs Is Chosen as an Advisor for Russia,” Wall Street Journal, 18 February 1992, sec. A, p. 12(E).

ELECTRONIC RESOURCES

As of August 1998, there is no comprehensive official Turabian style for citing electronic resources. Interested parties might want to use the formats developed by either the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) or Xia Li and Nancy B. Crane, Electronic Styles: a handbook for citing electronic Information, 2nd ed. (Medford, NJ: Information Today, 1996), which only covers APA and MLA styles.

FOOTNOTES

In the Turabian style, numbers are inserted in the text, then repeated at the beginning of the footnotes or endnotes to guide the reader to source material. A bibliography or reference list is also used.

BOOKS WITH ONE OR MORE AUTHORS

Author’s name(s) {first name first}, Title of Book (Place of publication: publisher, date), page. [Subsequent notes (Author(s)
date, page)]

  • Cal Thomas, The Things That Matter Most (New York: HarperCollins, 1994), 71. [Next (Thomas 1994, 73)]
  • Glen L. Urban and Steven H. Star, Advanced Marketing Strategy: Phenomena, Analysis and Decisions (Englewood Cliffs,
    NJ: Prentice Hall, 1991), 46. [Next (Urban and Star 1991, 123)]

BOOKS WITH NO AUTHOR(S)

Title of Book (Place of Publication: publisher, date), page. [Subsequent notes (Short Title date, page)]

  • Managing Global Portfolios (London: Euromoney Publications, 1989), 82. [Next (Managing Global 1991, 93)]

CHAPTER, ESSAY, STORY or POEM IN A BOOK

Author’s name {first name first}, “Title of Item Cited,” in Title of Book, ed(itor) of book (place of publication: publisher, date),
page. [Subsequent notes (Author date, page)]

  • Nelson C. Dometrius, “The Power of the (Empty) Purse,” in Gubernatorial Leadership and State Policy, ed. Eric B. Herzik and
    Brent W. Brown (New York: Greenwood Press, 1991), 95. [Next (Dometrius 1991, 101)]

ENCYCLOPEDIA ARTICLE

Title of Encyclopedia, Date of the edition, s.v. “Title of the Article,” by author’s name, if available. {Volume and page numbers
may be omitted.} [Subsequent notes (Title of Encyclopedia date)] World Book Encyclopedia, 1993 ed., s.v. “Women’s Movements,”
by Janet Zollinger Giele. [Next (World Book Encyclopedia 1993)]

MAGAZINE or JOURNAL ARTICLE

Author’s name, if available {first name first}, “Title of Article,” Title of Periodical volume and number (date): or date only,
{as appropriate – note differences in punctuation} page. [Subsequent notes (Author or Short Title date, page)]

  • Margot Hornblower, “Hot Lines and Hot Tempers,” Time, 28 November 1994, 36.
  • “Revised Diagnostic Subgroupings for Anorexia Nervosa,” Nutrition Reviews 52 no. 4 (1994): 214.

NEWSPAPER ARTICLE

Author’s name, if available {first name first}, “Title of Article,” Name of Newspaper, date, page {include section & edition}.