Productivity!
Nov. 29th, 2008 03:48 pmWays to know you've taken your digestion metaphor too far:"These non-English British people will not go quietly into that good colon."
*headdesk* Yeah, I'll be deleting that before I turn it in. Right now it's going to sit there and amuse me.
(I have roughly fifteen pages done! I say roughly because I'm writing it in single-space, and I've hit the middle of page eight, but I have some set-off quotes that won't be double-spaced once I switch it. And I also have one section on Glendower that's basically a collection of bullet points rather than actual paragraphs, but anyway. Fifteen pages! I think I'll need five to seven more to finish it up, which I should totally be able to do today and tomorrow. WIN.)
*headdesk* Yeah, I'll be deleting that before I turn it in. Right now it's going to sit there and amuse me.
(I have roughly fifteen pages done! I say roughly because I'm writing it in single-space, and I've hit the middle of page eight, but I have some set-off quotes that won't be double-spaced once I switch it. And I also have one section on Glendower that's basically a collection of bullet points rather than actual paragraphs, but anyway. Fifteen pages! I think I'll need five to seven more to finish it up, which I should totally be able to do today and tomorrow. WIN.)
no subject
Date: 2008-12-01 01:23 am (UTC)I think APA is for snobby people who want to look like they're smarter than everyone else/ they really are. That's the only reason I can think of for the history department to be using it.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-01 11:13 pm (UTC)But this is the one area where Word actually helps you rather than hinders you! Footnotes are easy in Word!
I like them for several reasons:
- I don't usually care where someone got their information unless it's an unreliable source, and in peer-reviewed journals, that's pretty much not going to happen. Thus, I can skip the footnotes in a way I can't the in-line citations. If for some reason I do want to go back and see who they cited and what page the original is on, it's a lot easier to just flip through the footnotes than the whole book or article. Plus, most quotes are introduced along the lines of "As XYZ writes...," and the page number after that is so much better in a footnote than taking up space in the paper itself.
- When I'm writing papers, it's a lot easier to tell if I'm citing someone overmuch by looking back through the footnotes than combing through the entire paper looking for parenthetical citations. If I see "Ibid" too many times, then I know I'm just summarizing someone else's argument rather than synthesizing my research. MLA doesn't have that handy visual cue.
- Nine out of ten journals use some variant of Chicago, or at least footnotes. It looks so much more professional than MLA, which as far as I can tell is used almost exclusively by students.
However, endnotes are an abomination unto the LORD. None of this applies to them.
(And I have offically Thought Too Much about this issue.)
no subject
Date: 2008-12-04 12:20 am (UTC)I was actually referring to Word. Unless the footnote features have improved dramatically in the last version or two, they leave QUITE a lot to be desired. I can't tell you the footnote-related nightmares I had to deal with when I was working in tech support at Princeton--stuff to be formatted for journals that just would. not. go no matter what the hell we did. That was the end of me and footnotes, like, ever.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-04 11:35 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-12-04 11:40 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-12-05 04:37 am (UTC)