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How do you create a citation when the entire record or collection of records is your reference? For instance, an unpaginated diary mentions a farm hand named Hank in at least 26 entries spanning five years. If I use this as evidence that Hank was a farmhand for the diarist in that time span, do I need to list every individual entry that mentions Hank or is it enough to include a date range?
If the diary is 200 pages, it would be a lot of work for a reader to find all the entries on their own. On the other hand, if I cite them individually, I give the false impression my list is complete when I was primarily focused on when Hank first and last appeared.
Another example might be going through a few years worth of probate inventories and noting 10% of the people mentioned jewelry. Is it enough to say that I examined 200 records within a specific date range and 20 mentioned jewelry? Do I need to provide explicit references to those 20?
Interesting questions, wfall…
Interesting questions, wfall! Taking your questions, piece by piece:
Q: How do you create a citation when the entire record or collection of records is your reference?
A: The basic framework of citations kicks in here. Typically:
For those occasions when we, say, need to document a negative search:
Q: How do we cite an unpaginated diary with numerous references in one limited part of the diary?
A: Two things are important to keep in mind here:
Therefore:
Q: How do we cite our personal analysis of a block of records? Example:
Going through a few years’ worth of probate inventories and noting 10% of the people mentioned jewelry, is it enough to say that I examined 200 records within a specific date range and 20 mentioned jewelry? Do I need to provide explicit references to those 20?
A: The basic framework for citing an “entire record or collection of records” would apply here. But your explanation would be much more detailed. For example:
Thank you, this really helps…
Thank you, this really helps.
To extend the diary example - let's say I build a frequency table showing how often specific individuals are mentioned. If the diarist mentions John 230 times and Mary 133, do I still list individual entries, perhaps in an appendix?
Creating this kind of table can be so helpful but it's also a lot of work. When I am looking at something I've already made the lazy way, using hash marks as I pawed through the pages, then a citation that refers people to a page range has a certain appeal!
Aggregating birth record data can reveal naming patterns, but citing individual birth records would be burdensome. Would it be acceptable to cite a database that instance? If I am using someone else's database, I would cite their database and my search terms. If I am using a database I created, the bar seems higher.
This is a tricky part of 'context' for me. We look through the same types of records across ten different towns to identify patterns and norms. Capturing that broad review in a citation can be overwhelming.
wfall, I totally agree with…
wfall, I totally agree with you that aggregating birth record data can reveal naming patterns. But, when "citing individual birth records would [seem] burdensome," it's time to remember the purpose of short citations. When doing genealogical or family history research, as you seem to be doing, citing the exact source of a birth, marriage, or death date is absolutely fundamental. It would also be burdensome to your readers to go through hundreds of pages of a diary to find the one date that is critical to them. (How burdensome would it be, when you cite a date in your narrative or enter a date into your relational database, to add—say—"Jones Diary, 2 March 1842"?)
Regarding the creation of a database that could (theoretically) be more easily cited: A database is a derivative. Every time a derivative entry is created, there is the likelihood of error. The larger the database, the more likelihood of errors. We are also taking data out of context, which strips away data that could be gleaned from surrounding entries within the original. If we wish to create a database for our own analytical purposes, that can be a very useful thing to do. But citing a database we created from the original, in lieu of citing the original, will frustrate users of our work and lessen the degree of trust.
With regard to your first question:
"to extend the diary example — let's say I build a frequency table showing how often specific individuals are mentioned. If the diarist mentions John 230 times and Mary 133, do I still list individual entries, perhaps in an appendix?
How things are handled also depends upon what you are producing. Your reference to an appendix suggests that you are preparing a book. (Yes? No?) Is it a transcription of the diary? A family history in which you will have a biography of John? A historical narrative in which there will be random references to John and his actions? These options introduce myriad ways of handling the material. For example:
Thank you for answering even…
Thank you for answering even more questions!
I'm not writing a book, and the diary is a made up example of the sort of thing I'm wondering about. I want to make assertions based on data I've aggregated myself, maybe something similar to the table on page 13 of Gloria Main's article "Naming Children in Early New England" found in The Journal of Interdisciplinary History, Vol. 27, No. 1 (Summer, 1996): https://www.jstor.org/stable/206471?seq=13
The table isn't exactly family history but it's something I would use to support an argument about parentage. Based on your responses, perhaps the best citation would be to cite the record set, specify the selection criteria, and provide a thorough explanation of methodology so someone could reproduce the result on their own.
There's still a problem with credibility since my aggregate data hasn't gone through any editorial or vetting process and I don't have the right credentials.
Your response has helped me realize that there may be stronger and simpler ways to prove a point. If I want to state that John was close to the diarist, then the fact John appears in more entries than anyone else could be meaningful, but citing several specific entries could serve the purpose even better.
I've also realized that there's a line. If I'm basing an assertion on a small number of instances, like the probate example, I have no excuse not to cite all of them. If I want to count how many times a name appears in a record, using hash marks on a piece of notepaper is probably not the way to go. Adding a date or page number for each instance feels burdensome when you already counted with hash marks!
wfall, you're thinking this…
wfall, you're thinking this through well. Definitely, family history needs more analyses of the aggregate and more students of Gloria Main's work.