Citation, Documentation of Sources

Q. I often have difficulty deciding how to cite translations with critical commentaries of ancient texts. What if I’m citing a critical comment or note made by the translator/Loeb editor? The bibliography entry is

Aristotle. Nicomachean Ethics. Rev. ed. Loeb Classical Library. 1934.

But how do I refer to something the editor/translator says in that edition? If it’s like “Rackham in Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics , p. xxx,” then do I need some separate bib entry that mentions Rackham?

Q. Per CMOS, in author-date documentation style, the citation can be placed immediately after the name in the text. If you have multiple such references in a single paragraph, does it become awkward? E.g., Chuck (1990, 3n8) indicates his disagreement with the theory outlined by Gregg and Harris (1990, 383, 387). However, Sherry and Lang (1991, 77–81) criticize both arguments, as do Brown and Brown (1992, 93–98).

Q. How do you cite T-shirts?

Q. When one is citing an ancient source whose author is unknown or disputed and which is published in the original language, is the editor’s name put before the title in footnotes and bibliography? Does the modern translator’s name go first?

Q. When using the same five sources throughout the same paper, do I create a new endnote (using a new number) throughout the paper (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, etc.)? For example, if my paper has twenty-two citations, will I use endnotes 1–22? Or do I just refer to the same five numbers throughout the paper?

Q. I’m struggling with the correct format for websites. It’s when the author is unknown that I run into trouble. For a print source, we’d begin with the article title, but CMOS says that the website’s owner “may” be used as the author. Does “may” mean “should”? How do we distinguish between the website’s name and owner? For example, if I’m citing an authorless article from CNN.com, do I begin with CNN.com as the author, and then also include CNN.com as the website? Can you sort this out?

Q. In citations and references, what is the preferred format for codes and standards issued by scientific organizations? As an example, “RASB Standard 531: Antigravity and what to do when it fails” (one of many standards published by the Rebel Alliance Scientific Branch, each on a different topic and with a different number) would be set differently by each of our several editing groups here, and we are trying to find common ground. Would you suggest we treat it along the lines of (1) a book title, (2) a multivolume work, (3) an article in a periodical, or (4) something else entirely?

Q. Hello—I need to correctly format an Australian law for a nonlegal publication. May I use the format suggested in CMOS for British historical records? I realize that this is specific to UK publications, but it seems like the best approximation.

Q. I normally have cited at the beginning of a paraphrase. For instance, if I am using three sentences to express a scholar’s point, I would reference after the first sentence. I recently was advised that this is not correct and that the last sentence of the three is the sentence that needs the reference. Can you enlighten me on which is correct?

Q. When I am citing a periodical that does not provide the page number, but does provide the volume and issue, is it necessary to cite the issue number (e.g., Hameed 2009, 3:1)? Or how should this be cited?