How Should I Cite Foxe'S Book Of Martyrs Pdf In Papers?

2025-09-02 19:03:58 92

3 回答

Wyatt
Wyatt
2025-09-03 03:48:15
I like to keep things simple when I'm rushing to finish a draft: pick the citation style your professor or journal wants, then make sure the PDF’s edition details are in the citation. I always hunt for an editor or translator name first—those people change how we read Foxe, and they need to be credited.

Quick practical examples I throw into my reference manager (Zotero works great):
- MLA: Foxe, John. 'Foxe's Book of Martyrs'. Ed. [Editor Name], [Publisher], [Year]. PDF file. Web. Accessed Day Month Year.
- APA: Foxe, J. (1563/[Edition Year]). 'Foxe's Book of Martyrs' (E. [Editor], Ed.). Retrieved from [URL] (accessed Month Day, Year).

One gotcha I always warn friends about: many PDFs are OCR'd scans and contain typos or missing pagination. If the PDF lacks stable page numbers, cite chapter or section headings or use paragraph numbers (e.g., para. 4) and, if possible, include the PDF’s filename or specific URL. If you’re quoting, include a locator that your readers can actually find in that PDF. Lastly, if there's a standard scholarly edition of 'Foxe's Book of Martyrs' in your field, cite that instead of a random internet PDF—it's more credible and safer for peer review.
Ellie
Ellie
2025-09-03 09:22:30
Okay — here’s how I handle citing a PDF of 'Foxe's Book of Martyrs' when I’m writing a paper, laid out so you can copy-paste and tweak for your style guide.

First, identify exactly which edition you used. Older works like John Foxe’s were published in 1563 but most people use a modern reprint or edited scholarly edition. For any citation, include: the author (John Foxe), the title in single quotes 'Foxe's Book of Martyrs', the editor or translator (if any), the edition or original date (1563) and the publication info for the edition you actually consulted. For a PDF hosted online, add the URL and the date you accessed it if the edition doesn’t give a stable publication date.

Examples I use as templates:
- Chicago (bibliography): Foxe, John. 'Foxe's Book of Martyrs'. Edited by [Editor Name]. [Place of publication]: [Publisher], [Year]. PDF, [URL] (accessed Month Day, Year).
- MLA (works cited): Foxe, John. 'Foxe's Book of Martyrs'. Edited by [Editor Name], [Publisher], [Year]. PDF, [URL]. Accessed Day Month Year.
- APA (reference): Foxe, J. (1563/[Year of edition]). 'Foxe's Book of Martyrs' (E. [Editor], Ed.). [Publisher]. Retrieved Month Day, Year, from [URL].

A practical tip from my notebook: if the PDF is from a reputable archive like Early English Books Online, Project Gutenberg, or a university press, cite that edition. If it’s a scan of a 16th-century copy, mention that and include the archive collection name. Also, if your paper needs footnotes, convert the bibliography entry to a footnote format. I always double-check with my course or journal style—rules about original vs. reprint dates and how to list editors can vary—so treat these samples as starting points rather than the final word.
Isla
Isla
2025-09-04 18:01:18
If I had to distill it into a short checklist for a bibliography entry, here's what I keep in mind: note the author (John Foxe), the precise title 'Foxe's Book of Martyrs', the edition/editor/translator you used, the publication year of that edition, the publisher (if available), the format (PDF), the stable URL, and the date you accessed it.

For example, I might write in Chicago notes: John Foxe, 'Foxe's Book of Martyrs', ed. [Editor] ([Place]: [Publisher], [Year]), PDF, [URL] (accessed Month Day, Year). If the PDF is of the original 1563 text but hosted by an archive, I mention the archive name. When quoting, I add page or section locators; if pages are missing, I reference chapter headings or paragraph numbers.

I find that being explicit about the edition and adding an access date clears up most confusion. If you want, tell me which PDF you have (archive.org, Gutenberg, a university scan) and I’ll draft the exact citation in your preferred style.
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