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Turabian Citation Style Guide 9th Edition: B. Journal Article from Online Periodical

About Citing Articles

For each type of source in this guide, the general form and specific examples will be provided for both the Notes-Bibliography and the Author-Date style options of Turabian.

This information and several of the examples were drawn from A manual for writers of research papers, theses, and dissertations (9th edition). Numbers in parentheses refer to specific pages in the manual.

For further information, please ask your instructor or refer to the Turabian manual.

DOIs

A Digital Object Identifier (DOI) is a unique alphanumeric string that is used to identify a certain source (typically journal articles).

Example: doi:10.1080/14622200410001676305

 

If a DOI is listed on an electronic source it is included in the reference.  When there is a choice between using a DOI or a URL, it is recommended that a DOI be used because they are more stable than most URLs. 

 

Append the DOI to https://doi.org/ in your citation. In addition, be sure to include that date you accessed the online source according to which style you are using: Bibliography style or Reference List style (p. 145)

Getting Help - The Writing Center

The Writing Center [TWC] is located on the first floor of the Library in room L101. Writing center staff will be available to help with your essays, research, and more.  

At the Writing Center, they can help with any writing assignment for any class at any stage in the process. That means they can help you:

  • brainstorm a topic
  • refine your thesis
  • organize a rough draft
  • practice paraphrasing or incorporating source material
  • understand a citation style like MLA, APA, or Turabian
  • revise your work before final submission

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Journal Article from an Online Periodical

When citing an article from an online journal, include the URL and access date. Use the website's preferred form of the URL if available rather than copying and pasting from the address bar in your browser. An even better choice, if available, is to include the article's DOI information in URL format  (http://dx.doi.org/insertDOInumber) and the access date. DOI URLs are generally more dependable than ordinary URLs (p. 145).
 
 

Notes-Bibliography Style (pp. 153; 187-191):

General Format

Note:
Note Number. Author First Name/Initial Author Last Name, "Title of Article: Subtitle of Article," Journal Title: Journal Subtitle Volume Number, no. Issue Number (Date of Publication): XX-XX, URL or https://doi.org/DOI.
 
 
Bibliographic Entry:
Author's Last Name, Author's First Name. "Title of Article: Subtitle of Article." Title of Journal Volume Number, no. Issue Number (Date of Publication): XX-XX. URL or https://doi.org/DOI.
 
 

Examples

Note:
5. Lisa J. Kiser, "Silencing the Lambs: Economics, Ethics, and Animal Life in Medieval Franciscan Hagiography," Modern Philology 108, no. 3 (February 2011): 340, https://doi.org/10.1086/65802.

Bibliographic Entry:
Kiser, Lisa J. "Silencing the Lambs: Economics, Ethics, and Animal Life in Medieval Franciscan Hagiography." Modern Philology 108, no. 3 (February 2011): 323-42. https://doi.org/10.1086/658052.
     
  

Author-Date Style (pp. 227; 254-258)

General Format

Parenthetical Citation:
 (Author Last Name Year, XX-XX)
 
 
Reference List Entry:
Author's Last Name, Author's First Name. Year. "Title of Article: Subtitle of Article." Title of Journal: Journal Subtitle Volume Number, no. Issue Number (Date of Publication): XX-XX. URL or https://doi.org/DOI.
 
 

Examples

Parenthetical Entry:
 (Kiser 2011, 340)
  
Reference List Entry:
​Kiser, Lisa J. 2011. "Silencing the Lambs: Economics, Ethics, and Animal Life in Medieval Franciscan Hagiography." Modern Philology 108, no. 3 (February): 323-42. https://doi.org/10.1086/658052.

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