2.2.2 DELC Writing Style Guide
2.2.2 DELC Writing Style Guide
WORD COUNT
For coursework essays, 10% above the word limit is acceptable but if students
breach this a ten-mark penalty will be applied.
The word count is to include quotations, but not footnotes, bibliography and
appendices.
The word count should be given at the end of the essay.
NUMBERS
Dates should be written 18 August 2007 and decades as the 1880s or 1990s
(without an apostrophe).
Inclusive numbers should include the fewest possible digits (esp. relevant for
referencing purposes): 32-3, 132-48, 200-5, except in ‘teen’ numbers, where 1 is
repeated (1914-18); dates should be elided to the last two digits: 1997-98.
ONLINE PUBLICATIONS
Please make sure you give the full reference, plus the date accessed, as in the
following examples:
Els Jongeneel, ‘Art and Divine Order in the Divina Commedia’, Literature and
Theology, 21 (2007), 131–45 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ litthe/frm008>
Steve Sohmer, ‘The Lunar Calendar of Shakespeare’s King Lear’, Early Modern
Literary Studies, 5.2 (1999) <http://purl.oclc.org/ emls/05-2/sohmlear.htm>
[accessed 28 January 2000] (para. 3 of 24).
Kent Bach, ‘Performatives’, in Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy
<http://www.rep.routledge.com> [accessed 3 October 2001].
FILMS
For films, the reference should include, as a minimum, title, director, distributor,
date, e.g.:
The Grapes of Wrath, dir. by John Ford (20th Century Fox, 1940)
LATER REFERENCES
In all references to a book or article after the first, the shortest intelligible form
should be used. This will normally be the author’s name, or a short-title reference
if appropriate, followed by the volume (if applicable) and page reference, e.g.
McArthur, p. 62; Elsky, pp. 42–46 (p. 43); Dictionary of the Middle Ages, vi
(1985), 26.
It may be necessary - for example when more than one work by an author has
been cited - to repeat a title, in a shortened form: McArthur, Worlds of Reference,
p. 9.
Within the body of an essay, once a particular work has been referenced with a
foot/end-note number, it is enough to write (McArthur, p. 33) following any
subsequent points drawing on that specific author’s thought.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
A bibliography must be added at the end of every essay, even if the only work
consulted is the primary text.
The bibliography should be in alphabetical order. The surname of the author or editor
will precede the forename(s) or initial(s). Note that no full stop is necessary at the
end of bibliographical entries.
Cook, Robert F., ‘Baudouin de Sebourc: un poème édifiant?’, Olifant, 14 (1989),
115–35
Fuentes, Carlos, Aura, ed. by Peter Standish, Durham Modern Language Series:
Hispanic Texts, 1 (Durham: University of Durham, 1986)
Johnson, Thomas H., ed., Emily Dickinson: Selected Letters, 2nd edn
(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1985)
Strayer, Joseph R., and others, eds, Dictionary of the Middle Ages, 13 vols (New
York: Scribner, 1982–89), vi (1985)