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This is my first time asking a question, though I have followed other questions the past year. I paid for some research at the Swenson Swedish Immigration Research Center in Rock Island, Illinois. I received some wonderful image copies of newspaper articles/obituaries. I'm trying to now write citations for them.
- To start, the newspaper is from Galesburg, Illinois called Hemlandet. I have the date and page number but not the complete page, so no column number.
- The Center used a database of North American Obituaries created by the online archive called EmiWeb (EmiWeb.eu). The Center sent me a printout of that website's entry.
I know I should cite what I have. What I have is a newspaper article from Hemlandet. But should I also included the role of the Center and of EmiWeb?
My stab at a citation:
First Reference: Hemlandet (Galesburg, Illinois) newspaper clipping, 4 Oct 1882, p. 7, "Dode," obituary listing for Anders Lundqvist; photocopy provided by Swenson Swedish Immigration Research Center (Rock Island, IL) from the EmiWeb Swedish-American obituaries database (http://www.emiweb.eu).
Second Reference: Hemlandet, 4 Oct 1882, p. 7, "Dode," obituary listing for Anders Lundqvist.
Bibliography: Hemlandet (Galesburg, Illinois). Swenson Swedish Immigration Research Center (Rock Island, IL) from the EmiWeb Swedish-American obituaries database (http://www.emiweb.eu).
Thank you,
Lisa Gorrell
Lisa, you are right. You
Lisa, you are right. You should cite what you have. That's a obituary from a newspaper. You've also indicated that someone provided it to you. Given that you have a photocopy of most of the page for authentication, including the identity of the agency that did the search for you—or the tools that they used to locate the obituary—would not be an essential part of the citation. It does no harm to include that data in your working notes and it would likely be helpful to you to capture that data for future refference; but most publishers would not include it and you won't find it in any standard citation manual. The one citation issue that would make these points relevant is the fact (as you noted) you cannot ascertain the column number from the photocopied image. That could be indicated this way in your citation:
First Reference: Hemlandet (Galesburg, Illinois),
newspaper clipping,4 October 1882, p. 7, "Dode," obituarylisting forAnders Lundqvist; photocopy provided by Swenson Swedish Immigration Research Center, Rock Island, IL,from the EmiWeb Swedish-American obituaries database (http://www.emiweb.eu).without identification of column.Second Reference: Hemlandet, 4 Oct 1882, p. 7, "Dode,"
obituary listing forAnders Lundqvist.Bibliography: Hemlandet. Galesburg, Illinois. Swenson Swedish Immigration Research Center. Rock Island, Illinois.
IL) from the EmiWeb Swedish-American obituaries database (http://www.emiweb.eu).You'll also note a couple of other things:
Thank you very much!
Thank you very much!
Another minor question. Since
Another minor question. Since the obituary is in Swedish, should I add "in Swedish" to the citation? I have added to my notes that it is in Swedish and that I created a rough translation using Google Translate for the time being.
First reference note:
Hemlandet (Galesburg, Illinois), 2 Sep 1885, p 5, "Döde," obituary Cajsa Lundquist, in Swedish; photocopy provided by Swenson Swedish Immigration Research Center, without identification of column.
Thank you.
Lisa, flip to EE 2.23 "Citing
Lisa, flip to EE 2.23 "Citing Titles in Foreign Languages" (books), 3.12 "Foreign-Language Titles & Generic Labels (manuscripts), or 7.16 "Record Books with Foreign Language Titles." There are also examples at 3.31, 6.54, 7.18, 7.41, and the QuickCheck Model at p.659.