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If I am citing a microfilm of a newspaper, which microfilm is held at a library, should I put a semicolon between the microfilm name/box label and the library? Here is my citation. Should there be a semicolon before "Greenfield Public Library"? Note, the original newspapers are not at the library (the library did not know their whereabouts).
A trivial question perhaps but cannot find the specific answer in EE. Thank you.
1. “Born,” Gazette and Courier, Greenfield, Massachusetts, 28 January 1884, p. 3, col. 3; microfilm image, Gazette & Courier Jan 1882–Dec 1888, Greenfield Public Library, Greenfield, Massachusetts.
Ann, your punctuation works
Ann, your punctuation works fine because the microfilm seems to be film held by the library as a preservation copy. If the microfilm were published, then that second layer of the citation would cite the publication—in which case your reference to the library where you used it would be non-essential.
Incidentally, there are a couple of ways in which you might tweak the citation:
Thank you -- this is very
Thank you -- this is very helpful! Especially bullet #2 -- I was not sure how to cite the box label. Bullet #1 I knew but had mis-typed it and forgot to correct. My apologies.
Ann
What are the elements needed…
What are the elements needed to cite an obituary in a newspaper that is microfilmed and stored at a public library?
Ohiogirl48@gmail.com, how…
Ohiogirl48@gmail.com, how does your situation differ from the original posting above?