School
of Information Management & Systems. Spring 2001.
245 Organization of Information
in Collections.
M. Buckland.
Bibliographic style
.
There are two really important rules: Enough information must be
supplied to identify the source unambiguously and the description provided
must be accurate. Also
consistency is desirable.
Books: Include at least: author/main entry, title, publisher,
place, date; more generously add: subtitle, series, vols or
pagination.
Articles in periodicals: Include at least: author, journal
title, volume number, year, pages; more generously: article title and
issue number.
Practice varies between publishers and between disciplines.
Publishers require adherence to their "house style" concerning exact
details of presentation: Spell out forenames, invert forenames/initials
of second author, italicise title, punctuation, &c. Journals usually
print "Instructions to authors" regularly; look at some recent issues
to identify required style. For books examine examples of publisher's
books and ask for guidelines.
Best general guide is The Chicago Manual of Style. 14th ed.
1993. 900 pages of detailed guidance on many aspects of writing and
book production: punctuation, proof-reading, indexes, spelling,
capitalizing, &c., &c.
Note increasing use of "author-date" style: Cite reference in
text by mentioning authors name and year of publication, e.g.
"Previous theories (Morton 1965; Sanchez 1976) were disproved by
Jones (1987)." List of references contains year of publication
following authors name:
Morton, J. 1965. A Theory of Style. Oakland: Duncan.
Information not derived from the document is usually supplied in
[square brackets].
See The Chicago Manual of Style for examples.
Information found on gophers, listservs and at World Wide Web sites:
Specify the address (location), the title, and the date and time seen (if
known, the date posted).
See
The Columbia Guide to Online Style
by Janice R. Walker and Todd Taylor (Columbia UP, 1998). Summarized at
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/cup/cgos/idx_basic.html
Sides, Charles. 1991. How to write and present technical
information. Oryx. ENGIN T11.S528 1991
Weiss, Edmond H. 1991. How to write usable user documentation.
2nd ed. Oryx. ENGIN QA76.165 W44 1991 (1st ed. in MAIN)