Article title - Parenthetical citations–reference list style: citing specific types of sources - Part II. Source Citation

A manual for writers of research papers, theses, and dissertations, 7th edition - Kate L. Turabian 2007

Article title
Parenthetical citations–reference list style: citing specific types of sources
Part II. Source Citation

List complete article titles and subtitles. Use roman type, separate the title from the subtitle with a colon, and do not use quotation marks. Use sentence-style capitalization (see 22.3.1).

R: Green, Nancy L. 2005. The politics of exit: Reversing the immigration paradigm. Journal of Modern History 77 (June): 263—89.

Terms normally italicized in text, such as species names and book titles, remain italicized within an article title; terms normally quoted in text remain in double quotation marks. Do not put a comma or period after an article title or subtitle that ends with a question mark or an exclamation point.

R: Lewis, Judith. 1998. “'Tis a misfortune to be a great ladie”: Maternal mortality in the British aristocracy, 1558—1959. Journal of British Studies 37:26—40.

Loften, Peter. 1989. Reverberations between wordplay and swordplay in Hamlet. Aeolian Studies 2:12—29.

Williamson, George S. 2000. What killed August von Kotzebue? The temptations of virtue and the political theology of German nationalism, 1789—1819. Journal of Modern History 72 (December): 890—943.

Foreign-language titles should also be capitalized sentence style according to the conventions of the particular language. If you add an English translation, enclose it in brackets, without quotation marks.

R: Bouchard, Gérard. 1979. Un essai d'anthropologie régionale: L'histoire sociale du Saguenay aux XIXe et XXe siècles. Annales: Économies, sociétés, civilisations 34 (January): 118—34.

Kern, W. 1938. Waar verzamelde Pigafetta zijn Maleise woorden? [Where did Pigafetta collect his Malaysian words?] Tijdschrift voor Indische taal-, land- en volkenkunde 78:271—73.