Counter Current Rules For Publishing
Counter Current Rules For Publishing
Style Sheet
In general, C-C/NANR follows the Chicago Manual of Style, 15th edition.
Common style issues and C-C/NANR departures from the Chicago Manual are
listed below.
QUOTATIONS
Words other than your own should be enclosed in quotation marks and cited
appropriately. For example: “Neither the spirit of the family, nor of the party,
nor the political interests that would have moderated every other Genevan,
was capable of tempering the mystic rage of this tub thumper . . .”
Quotations of fifty words or more should be set off as block quotations, and
do not require quotation marks. For example:
Neither the spirit of the family, nor of the party, nor the political interests
that would have moderated every other Genevan, was capable of temper-
ing the mystic rage of this tub thumper, born in misfortune, scourged silly
by an elderly spinster, and spoiled rotten by his first friends. Jack of all the
trades, including the most disgusting, in turn lackey and minion, music
master, parasite, kept man, he knew only one thing: his intellectual and
moral bankruptcy. . . .
CITATIONS
In reviews and review essays, full bibliographical information on the book
under review is given at the beginning. Cite the book under review in the text
as follows: “Neither the spirit of the family, nor of the party, nor the political
interests that would have moderated every other Genevan, was capable of
tempering the mystic rage of this tub thumper . . .” (p. 25). Note that the
period goes after the citation.
Neither the spirit of the family, nor of the party, nor the political interests
that would have moderated every other Genevan, was capable of temper-
ing the mystic rage of this tub thumper, born in misfortune, scourged silly
by an elderly spinster, and spoiled rotten by his first friends. Jack of all the
trades, including the most disgusting, in turn lackey and minion, music
master, parasite, kept man, he knew only one thing: his intellectual and
moral bankruptcy. . . . (p. 25)
C-C/NANR Style Sheet
If multiple works by the same author are under review, differentiate the
citations by including the title or an abbreviation of the title. For example: “I
wish to show my fellows a man in all the truth of nature; and this man will be
myself” (Confessions, 5). “Everything is good as it leaves the hands of the
Author of things . . .” (Emile, 37).
For all other citations, use footnotes rather than endnotes or the author-date
system.
If there are more than three authors or editors, use the first author’s or
editor’s name followed by et al. with no intervening punctuation (Charlotte
von Klobloch et al.); otherwise include all names.
Except for the preliminary pages of a book, which are set in lower cased
Roman numerals, Arabic numerals should be used when referring to volume
numbers, page numbers, chapters, or other parts of a book or periodical (even
when Roman numerals are used in the original publication).
9 Note: Numbers in the title of a work should remain as given, e.g., Anthony
M. Ludovici, “My Education,” Part II.
Books
The order of information is: Author; Title; Editor, compiler, or translator; Edition,
if not the first; Volume, if a single volume is being cited out of a multivolume
work; Title of individual volume, if applicable; Series title, if applicable; Facts of
publication (city, publisher, date); Page numbers.
Standard Book:
Two authors:
Richard Lynn and Tatu Vanhanen, IQ and Global Inequality (Augusta, Ga.:
Washington Summit Publishers, 2006).
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John Doe et al., eds., Title of Book (New York: PC Press, 1987), 151–60.
Anthony M. Ludovici, The Lost Philosopher: The Best of Anthony M. Ludovici, ed.
John V. Day (Berkeley, Cal.: Educational Translation and Scholarship
Foundation, 2003), 152.
Savitri Devi, Gold in the Furnace: Experiences in Post-War Germany, 3rd ed., ed.
R. G. Fowler (Atlanta: The Savitri Devi Archive, 2006).
Halsey Stevens, The Life and Music of Béla Bartok, rev. ed. (New York: Oxford
University Press, 1964), 128–29.
9 Note: abbreviations for editions: rev. (revised), 2nd (second), 3rd (third), etc.
(Do not use superscripts on ordinal numbers.)
Sam G. Dickson, “Race and the South,” in Race and the American Prospect:
Essays on the Racial Realities of Our Nation and Our Time, ed. Samuel Francis
(Mt. Airy, Md.: The Occidental Press, 2006), 199–220.
9 Note: C-C/NANR prefers that you include the page numbers of such articles.
Multivolume works:
Muriel St. Clare Bynre, ed., The Lisle Letters, 6 vols. (Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 1981). (if citing entire work)
9 Note: When naming the city of publication, one need not indicate the state or
country when that is commonly known or obvious from the name of the
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C-C/NANR Style Sheet
9 Note: Never use postal abbreviations for states in citations. For example, for
Virginia, the abbreviation is Va., not VA. When in doubt, consult:
http://www.stateabbreviations.us/
Dissertations or Theses
Titles of dissertations and theses are placed in quotes, not italicized. For
example:
9 Note: For an M.A. thesis, replace Ph.D. diss. with Master’s thesis.
Periodicals
The order of information is: Author; Title of article or column; Title of periodical;
Issue info (vol., issue # if needed, date); Page number(s), URL (if online).
Journals:
Marc Shell, “Language Wars,” New Centennial Review 1, no. 2 (2001): 1-17.
John Smith, “Irony in the Wife of Bath’s Tale,” Chaucer Review 10 (1997): 56-75.
9 Note: Use Arabic numerals, not Roman, for volume or issue numbers, even if
the journal cited uses roman numerals.
Popular Magazines:
John Smith, “Computers Hit the Classroom,” U.S. News and World Report,
March 7, 1994, 75.
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C-C/NANR Style Sheet
Newspapers:
“Kodak Holds Its Meeting Amid Racial Protests,” New York Times, April 26,
1967, A2.
Miscellaneous References
In general, begin with the specific item being cited followed by all relevant
information (date, type of item if not a letter, name of collection, and its location):
Website References:
By 1990 he had become director of his own small think tank, the Philadelphia-
based Middle East Forum (http://www.meforum.org).
9 Specific URLs (e.g., the citation for a particular article or other item online)
should be placed in footnotes. For example:
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C-C/NANR Style Sheet
9 Put URLs in standard Roman type, not in italics. Do not set them off in angle
brackets (< >) as specified in the Chicago Manual.
9 Do not hyphenate or break URLs at the end of a line, lest inaccuracies creep
in.
9 Do not put periods at the end of URLs, even if they come at the end of a note.
Legal Cases:
United States v. Dennis, 183 F2d 201, 203 (2d Cir 1950)
9 Court cases should be italicized in text (e.g., Smith v. Brown established . . .).
If the first number cited is less than 100, then use all digits of the second
number. For example:
3–10
71–72
96–117
If the first number is 100 or a multiple of 100, then use all digits of the second
number. For example:
100–104
600–613
1100–1123
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C-C/NANR Style Sheet
If the first number is 101 through 109 (or 201 through 209, etc.), then use only
the changed part of the second number. For example:
107 – 8
505 – 17
1002 – 6
If the first number is 110 through 199 (or 210 through 299, etc.), then use at
least two digits of the second number, more when necessary. For example:
321 – 25
415 – 532
1536 – 38
1496 – 504
11564 – 78
Spell out acronyms the first time you use them, followed by the acronym in
parentheses.
C-C/NANR does not grant the United States special status. Therefore, contra
the Chicago Manual, you may use simply US as a noun, as one would use
USSR and UK.
Do not use periods with US, UK, USSR, and the like.
With an individual’s initials, use periods and put a space between the letters,
e.g., G. R. G. Mure not G.R.G. Mure.
However, when a person is commonly known by his initials, use only the
initials, without periods or spaces between, e.g., JFK, LBJ, FDR.
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C-C/NANR Style Sheet
PUNCTUATION
Use serial commas (“The flag is red, white, and blue,” not “The flag is red,
white and blue.”).
Periods and apostrophes go inside quotations marks (“The period goes inside
the quotation mark.”). Colons and semi-colons go outside (I said to her,
“Don’t go outside”; she didn’t like that.).
Do not use a comma between a person’s name and Jr. or II, etc. (John Smith
Jr., John Smith IV).
Use only one space after every period, comma, semicolon, or colon.
CAPITALIZATION
Do not capitalize the color designations of races, e.g., use white not White,
negro not Negro, black not Black.
In general, titles of individuals are capitalized only when used with the
person’s name, e.g., Emperor Julian, Queen Elizabeth, Professor Wolters,
Prime Minister Thatcher, President Reagan, Swami Satyananda, Pope
Alexander VI. But they are not capitalized when used on their own, e.g., the
emperor, the queen, the professor, the prime minister, the president, the
swami, the pope. See Chicago Manual 8.22 for exceptions.
Supreme Court; the court (contra the Chicago Manual, C-C/NANR does not
make an exception for the US Supreme Court)
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C-C/NANR Style Sheet
Congress, congressional
First World War and Second World War are preferred to World War I and
World War II, but never use WW I and WW II.
Decades should be expressed as the 1980s not the ’80s, unless the contracted
form is part of everyday usage, e.g., “Shy Tuna is an ’80s music cover band.”
The following ways of referring to the first two decades of a century are
acceptable:
COMPOUND WORDS
If in doubt, consult the Chicago Manual, 7.90 or the American Heritage College
Dictionary.
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DATES
No punctuation is needed when only a month and year are given, e.g.,
August 1945.
FOREIGN WORDS
Contrary to the Chicago Manual, C-C/NANR style is to set foreign words that
have been integrated into the English language and appear in standard
English dictionaries in italic type, e.g., fait accompli, pro rata, mea culpa, a priori.
Isolated foreign language words and phrases that are not quotations should
be set in italics.
Proper nouns in a foreign language are always set in Roman (regular) type.
MISCELLANEOUS
If more than one spelling is given in the dictionary, use the first. C-C/NANR
uses the American Heritage College Dictionary.
Academic fields should be referred to in lower case, except when one or more
of the terms is a proper noun or adjective, e.g., US history, English literature.
The ampersand (&) may be used only in notes, and only where it appears in
the name of a publisher.
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C-C/NANR Style Sheet
The basenji, which is the smallest breed of hound, is both highly intelligent
and extremely mischievous.
9 A rule of thumb: If you can drop the clause and not lose the point of the
sentence, use “which”; if you can’t, use “that.”
9 Another rule of thumb: A “which” clause goes inside commas; a “that” clause
doesn’t. For example:
The dog that carried the kitten to safety is Mike’s Rhodesian ridgeback.
Never use just the last name of a living person. Men are always Mr.,
Professor, Doctor, etc. Women are Miss or Mrs., if their marital status is
known, Miss if not known. Never use Ms.
NUMBERS
Usually, numbers are spelled out up to “ten,” and numerals are used for 11
and higher.
Always use numbers to express clock time, e.g., 1 p.m. not one p.m.
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C-C/NANR Style Sheet
Never start a sentence with a numeral; spell out the number instead.
All numbers over 999 (except dates) require commas, e.g., $1,000 not 1,000 BC.
Ordinals are 12th, 13th, etc. Do not use superscript for the “th.”
167–72
from 167 to 172 (not from 167–72)
between 167 and 172 (not between 167–72)
1898–1903
from 1898 to 1903 (not from 1898–1903)
between 1898 and 1903 (not between 1898–1903)
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