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I'm trying to cite a PDF reprint of a book that contains abstracts from a weekly newspaper.
The book, PDF reprint, the website offerring the reprint and the original newspaper are all from the same organization, leading to a pretty repetitive citation:
Marriages, 1834–1855: gleaned from the Pittsburgh Christian Advocate (n.p. : Western Pennsylvania Conference of the United Methodist Church, 2000, reprint 2017), PDF download, Western PA Conference, United Methodist Church (http://www.wpaumc.org/files/resource/historical_records/archives/marriages%201834-1855.pdf : accessed 28 July 2017); entry for William Aspy and Hannah Hepler, m. 4 Jan 1838; citing original publication in the Pittsburgh Christian Advocate, weekly newspaper (discontinued) of the Western Pennsylvania Conference of the United Methodist Church, 8 Feb 1838.
Is there a more concise way to construct this citation (not repeating the Western Pennsylvania... information)?
Also, is it valuable to include the publication location for discontinued newspapers, for example Pittsburgh (Pennsylvania) Christian Advocate?
Brian
Brian,
Brian,
Yes, we can make it more concise—and add clarity, too. To dissect the situation for our readers: you have two things to cite.
Layer 1: The imaged source
Most of your answers are in EE’s chapter 12 (Books). At 12.75, you'll find the basic format for "Reprints and Revisions."
In your Layer 1, you have this:
Marriages, 1834–1855: gleaned from the Pittsburgh Christian Advocate (n.p. : Western Pennsylvania Conference of the United Methodist Church, 2000, reprint 2017),
Our recommendation would be this:
Western Pennsylvania Conference of the United Methodist Church, Marriages, 1834–1855: Gleaned from the Pittsburgh Christian Advocate (2000; Reprint, N.P.: Archives & Ministry Team, WP Conference—UMC, 2017), 9, William Aspy to Hannah Hepler (m. 4 Jan. 1838), citing issue of 8 February 1838;
Explanations:
Layer 2: The provider of the images
Your Layer 2 offers this:
PDF download, Western PA Conference, United Methodist Church (http://www.wpaumc.org/files/resource/historical_records/archives/marriages%201834-1855.pdf : accessed 28 July 2017); entry for William Aspy and Hannah Hepler, m. 4 Jan 1838;
Our recommendation would be this:
PDF, Western PA Conference, United Methodist Church (http://www.wpaumc.org/files/resource/historical_records/archives/marriages%201834-1855.pdf : accessed 28 July 2017).
If you’ve had time to read our QuickLesson 19: “Layered Citations Work Like Layered Clothing,”you might recall No. 3 of our “three basic rules.”
“3. Details from one layer should not be inserted into a different layer.”
(The point has also been repeated in our just posted QuickLesson 25: “ARKS, PALS, Paths & Waypoints (Citing Online Image Providers),” which puts it this way:
“Never, ever, should details from one layer be mixed into the other layer.”
The website does not offer a database with an “entry for William Aspy and Hannah Hepler, m. 4 Jan 1838.” The website offers the book that was cited in Layer 1. That’s all the website offers, with regard to your item of interest. There is no database in which entries can be accessed through a query box. The pages are not imaged separately, so there’s no image number to cite. The website simply offers the book as one PDF document.
Layer 3: Citation to Source of the Source.
If the website did offer a database, then it would be appropriate to use a third layer to record what the website identifies as the source of all its data. That’s not the case here.
Assembled, your two layers would look like this:
Western Pennsylvania Conference of the United Methodist Church, Marriages, 1834–1855: Gleaned from the Pittsburgh Christian Advocate (2000; Reprint, N.P.: Archives & Ministry Team, WP Conference—UMC, 2017), 9, William Aspy to Hannah Hepler (m. 4 Jan. 1838), citing issue of 8 February 1838; PDF, Western PA Conference, United Methodist Church (http://www.wpaumc.org/files/resource/historical_records/archives/marriages%201834-1855.pdf : accessed 28 July 2017).
In the process, we've shortened 71 words to 57.
You also ask:
Is it valuable to include the publication location for discontinued newspapers, for example Pittsburgh (Pennsylvania) Christian Advocate?
If I were doing the research and the publication told me where to find the original issues, yes, I'd want to record that also. I'd be wanting to study those original issues for a lot more than just marriage records!