Streamlining Citations
New MLA Handbook seeks to make citing
sources from a variety of media easier and more commonsensical.
In
fairness to the Modern Language Association and other makers of popular
academic style guides, citing sources -- if always tedious -- was once relatively
straightforward: journal articles like this, books like that. But the
proliferation of media sources -- especially electronic ones -- in recent years
has made writing citations confusing at best (and purgatorial at worst).
So
this week’s release of the eighth edition of the MLA Handbook will be welcome news to any
humanist who’s ever tried to cite a YouTube video. The book, which will soon be accompanied by a digital style center that
answers questions and offers sample papers and teaching resources, seeks to
streamline citations by taking more of a logic-based approach, rather than
rules based. That mean less feverish page flipping to locate a style and more
critical thinking about scholarly attribution.
“Rather
than beginning with a source’s publication format -- book, article, website,
television show -- and then explaining the rules for that particular format, we
now focus on the elements that are common to nearly all sources, explaining how
to find those elements and put them together into a works-cited entry,” said
Kathleen Fitzgerald, associate executive director and director of scholarly communication
for the MLA, who oversaw the changes.
The
new handbook “really focuses on principles -- not just on how to create a
citation that is correct, but on the purposes of citation practice, as well as
on strategies for evaluating sources,” she added.
MLA’s
new, slimmer guide also includes some specific changes to style, in support of
the bigger aim. It has eliminated the use of many abbreviations and city of
publication for books, and dropped the medium of publication in most cases. It
regularizes punctuation and encourages the inclusion of full web addresses
(URLs). There’s also a new “container” concept, which Fitzgerald described as
reflecting the “mobility of sources today.” If an article is contained in a
journal but downloaded from JSTOR, for example, the citation should reflect
both facts.
Here’s
a comparative book citation, using rules from the seventh and eighth editions
of the MLA Handbook.
The differences are subtle, but most citations -- regardless of medium or
source -- would now be much more similar to the second than the first.
Seventh
edition: Copeland, Edward. “Money.” The
Cambridge Companion to Jane Austen. Ed. Copeland and Juliet
McMaster. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1997. 131-48. Print.
Eighth
Edition: Copeland, Edward. “Money.” The
Cambridge Companion to Jane Austen, edited by Copeland and Juliet
McMaster, Cambridge UP, 1997, pp. 131-48.
Fitzpatrick
recently wrote about the significance of scholarly citations and MLA’s new
approach in the L.A.
Review of Books, saying writers “need to know how to cite an
ebook, how to cite a tweet, how to cite an Instagram image, how to cite -- no,
seriously, my office actually received this inquiry -- a book that a player
reads within the action of a video game.” But at some point, she continued,
“the process of developing and disseminating all of these citation formats runs
the risk of creating a map that is larger and more complex than the terrain
through which it attempts to guide writers and readers. And this is the point
at which academic writers understandably begin to grumble about citations being
outdated and unnecessary anyhow.”
Disagreeing
with some assertions that citations are obsolete in the Google age, Fitzpatrick
wrote that citations are needed to connect disparate works and that she was
“convinced that it is possible to get rid of the murky bathwater without
disposing of the baby. Citation practices can instead be future-proofed, both
so that the markers authors leave behind today continue to point in the proper
directions tomorrow and so that style manuals needn’t grow endlessly complex.”
Michael
Greer, a lecturer in rhetoric and writing at the University of Arkansas at
Little Rock and a content developer for higher education publishers, is an
early fan of the handbook (which he previewed for MLA to assess its impact on
teachers and publishers). He called it “streamlined and flexible,” and,
notably, half the length of the previous handbook.
Greer
said there’s no one right way to cite a single source and that students are
“encouraged to think critically about sources instead of going on a scavenger
hunt for the one example citation that matches what they are working on.” Now
students are encouraged to look for a key elements -- author, title and
container -- and “build” a citation around them.
From
an instructor’s perspective, he said, the new handbook is more teachable, and
includes a template that students can use for citing any source. “The new style
is better aligned with instructors' focus on process and critical thinking when
teaching students the basics of writing with sources,” he added.
Greer
said the handbook amounted to a “big change.” He guessed that “not everyone
will love it at first,” but that it “will come as a breath of fresh air to most
writing teachers.”
Source | https://www.insidehighered.com
Regards
Pralhad
Jadhav
Senior
Librarian
Khaitan
& Co
Upcoming
Event | National Conference on Future Librarianship: Innovation for Excellence
(NCFL 2016) during April 22-23, 2016.
Note
| If anybody use these post for forwarding in any social media coverage or
covering in the Newsletter please give due credit to those who are taking
efforts for the same.
No comments:
Post a Comment