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In EE 9.6, which deals with citing Online Abstracts, Databases & Indexes, guidance is given to place emphasis on the derivative work, rather than the original creator. The original creator should only be cited as "the source of your source".
With this in mind, I am crafting a citing to an online index, and working on trying to figure out what exactly the correct "source of the souce" information is that I should use.
FamilySearch.org offers the following "citation"...
"Michigan, Death Certificates, 1921-1952," index, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/KF7V-84W : accessed 18 Nov 2014), James Hamilton Gawley, 04 May 1932; citing Hartford, Van Buren, Michigan, United States; 00956; Division for Vital Records and Health Statistics, Lansing; FHL microfilm 1973118.
I would suggest a slightly modified version for the first layer of the citation...
"Michigan, Death Certificates, 1921-1952," index, FamilySearch.org (https://familysearch.org : accessed 18 November 2014), James Hamilton Gawley, 4 May 1932;
but I'm confused about the "source of the source" information. In the FamilySearch offered citation, it seems really lenghty and not entirely necessary. I clicked on the FHL microlfilm roll number link, and it directed me information about their database, and provides the following information about the "author" of the database...
Author: Michigan. Department of Health. Vital Records Section; Michigan. Department of Community Health. Division for Vital Records and Health Statistics.
Is there any direction on what exactly out of all of this source of the source information their website provides, I should consider using in my citation?
I hope you don't mind me
I hope you don't mind me interjecting some thoughts. Citations produced by the FamilySearch website are automated, so it is entirely proper (and encouraged) for you to modify the citation for your use.
I hope these thoughts help.
Robert Raymond
FamilySearch
Thanks, Robert, for jumping
Thanks, Robert, for jumping in to help, so that dpslager and other interested users didn't have to wait for me to finish a deadline elsewhere. Your advice is always valued.
So would the following be an
So would the following be an EE appropriate citiation?
"Michigan, Death Certificates, 1921-1952," index, FamilySearch.org (https://familysearch.org : accessed 18 November 2014), James Hamilton Gawley, 4 May 1932; citing Hartford, Van Buren, Michigan; Division for Vital Records and Health Statistics, Lansing.
Robert indicated that, "Terms following 'citing' are given to assist others in locating the original at the archive."
I understand that as researchers, and citationists we are compelled to seek out enough information to lead others to the original records, but when we encounter other websites that aren't so forthcoming as FamilySearch with the information needed for the "source of the source", I'm left wondering what elements are necessary for me to discover and have present in my citation?
The name of the archive?
The location of the archive?
The name of collection in the archive?
and in what order do these elements appears? Collection Name; Archive Name, Archive City.
~David
David,
David,
That works fine, though we might suggest one tweak. What you're citing is actually a database rather than an index--and an abstract rather than an index entry.
I might add, for others who may not click on your link: Normally, if (as you've done) we cite a root URL for a site with many offerings, or for a database that have many subdivisions as FS databases often do, we'll need to include a path that will get us to the exact document. In this case, however, the database is fairly simple, with statewide coverage, and you've given enough data to relocate the record easily.
So when a website doesn't
So when a website doesn't provide easy to find "source of the source" information, what information do I need to seek out in order to build the "source of the source" portion of my citation?
The name of the archive?
The location of the archive?
The name of the collection in the archive?
an in what order do these elements appear in the citation?
e.g. ... ; citing Collection name; archive name, archive city.
These appear to be the elements and order the Richard suggested in his earlier post. I just want to make sure I've got that right.
David,
David,
When you use a source that provides you with any piece of information, what do you do? If it cites its own source, do you just copy down what it cites and go blithely on your way feeling secure because a source is attached? I suspect not. I suspect what you do is to carefully analyze the information, analyze the details that have been given for the source, and then decide for yourself (a) whether the cited details are adequate for you to locate and study the original; or, for that matter (b) whether the type of information you've been given should even be found in the kind of source that was cited.
By extension, if a source doesn't conveniently tell us where its information comes from, we study it just as carefully, looking for clues to the source and looking for links that may provide more information about the source. A citation model for that kind of source will guide us as to the kind of source information we need to find. If our own source provides, somewhere, some clue to the original, then we copy whatever it says and put those words in quotation marks so that we will thereafter know exactly what it gave us. Then we use those clues to track down the original source and, having used the original, we create an appropriate citation to the original. If our own source does not provide, anywhere, any clue to the original, then our citation to that source would say so--after which we would again proceed to try to find the source of the source elsewhere.
However, if our source does not cite its own source completely, any effort we might make to find details to fill in the blanks could backfire. We could end up with a citation that partially cites the source of our source and partially cites some other similarly named source that doesn't have the same information.
Bottom line: We cite what we use. Then we cite what our source tells us that it used--or else we note that it didn't tell us.
Thank you. Being new a
Thank you. Being new a citationist, I'm eager to learn and your guidance is ever invauable.
You're welcome, David. That's
You're welcome, David. That's why EE was created.