Great to talk to so many of you this morning, exciting to hear snippets of your journeys and really pleased to share in your questioning of dance research.
As promised, here are our presentation guidelines ahead of submission of your written papers on the 13th.
Any questions, on this or your work in general, do get in touch.
Looking forward to seeing you on June 2.
Helen
Presentation
of Essays
Guidelines
Essays should
be typed, 1.5 or double spaced, on one side of the paper only.
Please justify the
margins on both sides. Fonts: use Times New Roman, Arial or Garamond.
The cover
page should include;
your name
student number
programme and year
module
number and title
module tutor
full title of assignment and date written and word count.
Please do not use bold type or underlining
in your essay, but italicize any
foreign words as well as book titles and titles of choreographic works, plays
or films. Use single quotes (‘and “double quotes” inside single quotes’).
1)
References in
bibliography:
A bibliography is a list of all source material you have used,
whether or not you have quoted from it. It is important to show that you have extended
your knowledge by referring to other texts/works/authorities. A bibliography
should be presented in alphabetical order of author’s surname. There are
various ways of setting out a bibliography, but the details should always
include:
Book:
Surname, Initial(s). Date of
publication. Title in italics. Place
of Publication: Publisher.
For example:
Ostwald, P. 1999. Vaslav Nijinsky. A Leap into Madness. London:
Robson Books.
Edited book:
Surname, Initial(s). (ed.). Date
of publication. Title in italics.
Place: Publisher.
For example:
Carter, A. (ed.). 1998. The
Routledge Dance Studies Reader. London: Routledge.
Book chapter:
Surname, Initial(s). Date.
Chapter title. In Name of editor (ed.), Book Title. Place of
Publication: Publisher, pages in book.
For example:
Carter, A. 1996. Bodies of
knowledge: Dance and feminist analysis. In Patrick Campbell (ed.), Analysing performance. A critical reader. Manchester:
Manchester University Press, 43-55.
Journal articles:
Surname, Initial(s). Date. Title
of article. Title of journal volume
(issue no.), page numbers.
For example:
Gill, R., and Pratt, A. 2008. In the Social Factory? Immaterial Labour,
Precariousness and Cultural Work. Theory,
Culture & Society 25(7), 1–30.
Videography / DVDs (a list of videos /DVDs you have used):
Name of choreographer. Date of
work. Title of work in italics.
[DVD/video, etc]. Place of distribution, distributing company.
For example:
Khan, A. and Cherkaoui, S.L. 2008. Zero
Degrees [DVD]. Sadler’s Wells on Screen. Axiom Films International Limited.
Media broadcast, e.g. television programme
Title. Year. Type of media. Originator (e.g. channel). Exact date
and time of broadcast.
For example:
The Culture Show. 2013. TV.
BBC2. 13th March, 2200 hrs.
Live
performance:
Choreographer. Year of premiere. Title in italics. Company (optional).
[Location. Date seen].
For example:
Ashton, F.
1948. Cinderella. [Royal Opera House,
London. 13 January 2004].
Newspaper articles:
1)
Printed:
Surname,
Initial(s). Title of article. Title of
newspaper, day and month of article, page number.
For example:
Rae, B. 2008.
Mozart dances at Civic Theatre. The New
Zealand Herald, 25 August, 11.
2)
Electronic:
Surname, Initial(s). Year of publication. Title of
Article. Title of Newspaper in italics [online]. Day and month of
article. Page number of article - if applicable. Available from: URL of
database supplier [accessed date].
For example:
Internet References
Electronic
references should contain the following elements:
Surname, initial(s) of author (if
known). Date. Title of document [Type
of resource, i.e. Online]. Organisation responsible (optional). Available from:
Title of Website [accessed
date].
For example:
With author:
Cvejic, B. 2010. Xavier Le Roy: The Dissenting Choreography of One Frenchman Less.
Available from:
Without author:
BBC News. 2008. Factory gloom worst
since 1980 [online]. Available from: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/7681569.stm
[accessed 10 June 2012].
Note: Dates are not always available for web pages. If this is so use (n.d.)
to represent no date so that the reader knows you have omitted this element. In
the in-text quotation, please reference as follows: Cvejic, 2010 (first
example); BBC News, 2008 (second example).
Students should only use internet
references when no other possibility for gaining this information exists. This
is sometimes the case with current dance performances or choreographers. Dance
students are not allowed to use Wikipedia or quotation websites for their
assignments. They frequently provide incorrect and plagiarised information or
quotations taken out of context which are not a means to find relevant academic
information.
Other source material may be listed e.g. ‘Interviews’; there are no definitive guidelines for the
presentation of these, but please give as much information as possible. For
interviews give the name and role of person you interviewed, date and place of
interview.
2)
In-text quotations
References should follow the Harvard style whereby references are cited in the text as (author,
date: page) with full details in the bibliography at the end of the article. As a rule, page numbers should also be present unless the
quotation refers to a very general argument or idea. Quotations of three lines
or more should be indented in a separate paragraph. Please note that in-text
quotations do not include the
initial(s) of the author, but initial(s) should be stated in the bibliography.
Examples
Direct quotations:
- Phillips (2002: 43) noted that ‘contemporary dance
in New Zealand is evolving rapidly’.
-
‘Contemporary dance in New Zealand is evolving rapidly’ (Phillips, 2002: 43).
If author is not known:
- This was obviously not the case before
2001 (Beating the Millenium Bug, 2003: 14)
- In Beating the Millenium Bug (2001: 14), it
is claimed that this was not the case before 2001.
Secondary sources:
- Smith (cited in Martin, 1991:
152) stated that one medium can be used in many different ways.
- One medium can be used in many
different ways (Smith, cited in Martin, 1991: 52).
Indirect
quotations/paraphrasing a passage from a text:
- As the economy heated up, the government support
for the arts cooled down (Horosko, 2002).
- Horosko
states that as the economy heated up, the government support for the arts cooled
down (2002).
When
paraphrasing, you need to state the page number as if it were a direct
quotation. If paraphrasing an argument that extends over several pages, you
need to state this page range in full (e.g. 58-61). In the above example we can
assume that this is an online source as there is no page number stated.