Harvard Style of Citing References |
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Secondary Contributions or Quotations If you refer to a person who has not produced a published work or contributed to one, but who is mentioned or quoted in someone else’s work, you should give the person’s full name in the body of your work and cite the source author who mentions the person or quote. If quoting, include it in the body of the text in double quotation marks, if less than a line. Longer quotations should be indented, single-spaced and appear within double quotation marks. For a direct quotation, the relevant page number(s) should always be given, after the year and within the brackets. |
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In text: | ||
e.g. Richard Hammond stressed the part psychology plays in advertising in an interview with Marshall (1999). or “Advertising will always play on peoples’ desires”, Richard Hammond said in a recent article (Marshall, 1999 p.67). or Albert Einstein’s suggestion that one should “try not to become a man of success but rather … a man of value”, displays a refreshing view of achievement (Miller, 1955, p.64). |
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In your list of references: | ||
Give the work that has been published, (i.e. Marshall or Miller), in the list of references. e.g. Miller, W. (1955) Death of a genius: his fourth dimension, time, overtakes Einstein. Life Magazine, 38 (18), 61-64. |