Routledge Books
Hi.
Does anyone have a csl style acceptable to the Books division of Routledge? Their guidelines are different from the T&F journals; I've scanned the existing styles but can't find anything that matches.
Routledge books requires Harvard style in-text citations of the following form: "(Dennett 1980: 115-6; Dennett 1998)" -- with a colon -- and bibliographies that conform to the below:
Bloggs, N. (1982) A Short History of Trash, London: Routledge.
Dennett, D. (1980) "Junk Memes," Journal of Refuse Studies 67(1): 112-25.
----- (1998) "Trash Explained," in N. Bloggs (ed.) Trash: Contemporary Perspectives, Cambridge: MIT Press.
I'm sure somebody has produced a csl style consistent with these guidelines. Any advice locating it would be appreciated.
Does anyone have a csl style acceptable to the Books division of Routledge? Their guidelines are different from the T&F journals; I've scanned the existing styles but can't find anything that matches.
Routledge books requires Harvard style in-text citations of the following form: "(Dennett 1980: 115-6; Dennett 1998)" -- with a colon -- and bibliographies that conform to the below:
Bloggs, N. (1982) A Short History of Trash, London: Routledge.
Dennett, D. (1980) "Junk Memes," Journal of Refuse Studies 67(1): 112-25.
----- (1998) "Trash Explained," in N. Bloggs (ed.) Trash: Contemporary Perspectives, Cambridge: MIT Press.
I'm sure somebody has produced a csl style consistent with these guidelines. Any advice locating it would be appreciated.
that should at least give you something similar.
The only csl I can find using http://editor.citationstyles.org/searchByExample/ is the one from American Mineralogist, because it is the only one that doesn't have punctuation after the parenthetical year in bibliography entries. But it does seem to use "p." and "pp." in in-text citations.
*update*: after some more searching around here, I learned I can eliminate the use of "p." and "pp." by deleting
<label variable="locator" form="short"/>
in the CSL with a text editor.