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Critical Race & Ethnic Studies 101 (Alamri): Citing

Race and the Media

Key Characteristics

There are several versions of Chicago style, including Turabian style, which is a simplified version keyed toward students. Humanities disciplines frequently make use of the Notes and Bibliography system (NB), which allows writers to make footnotes and other commentary. Social sciences disciplines tend to use the Author-Date system.

Chicago Manual of Style website (17th ed.)

In-Text Citations

The Notes and Bibliography system requires that each in-text reference includes a number corresponding to a footnote.

From Purdue OWL:

  • 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. 

For more information on Notes and Bibliography citation lists, visit Purdue OWL guidelines for Chicago Manual of Style 17th Ed.

In the Author-Date system, citations are placed into parentheses in the text in this order: author last name year of publication, page number, and then fully cited in the References section.

Example: (Mueller 2014, 19)

Multiple authors may be listed, or acknowledged with et al.

Example: (Bennett, Sanders, and Lee 1998, 238)

Example: (Bennett et al 1998, 238)

For more information on Author Date system, visit Chicago Style Information from Trinity University.

Reference List

  • Notes and Bibliography references list should be named "Bibliography;" Author-Date style references should be named "References."
  • Bibliographies / Reference lists should be in alphabetical order by the first letter in the first word of each entry.
  • Write out names of first 3 authors
  • If there are more than three but up to ten authors, write out the names of each author in the reference entry, but use First Author name et al in the in-text citations.
  • Use DOIs instead of URLs, if possible

For more instructions, visit References from Purdue OWL.

Style by Discipline

Chicago style is usually used in the Humanities, History, and other fields. It includes several different versions for notes, bibliography entries, and shortened citations.

Turabian style is a simplified version of Chicago style with some modifications for the needs of student writers. It includes a notes-bibliography style and a parenthetical citations-reference list style.

Chicago / Turabian Examples

Examples are for Bibliography, using Notes-Bibliography style. See references to the left for more information on other styles in Chicago.

How to Cite in Chicago/Turabian Style

Purdue OWL (2:55)