for Details Articles Guidelines Symposium Beauvoir Articles Items are sent to
beauvoir2008@gmail.com texts sent in Times New Roman, size 12.
Titles and Headings:
* Above all, make clear their hierarchy, and that no more than 3 levels. * Make
as short as possible.
* Do not put a period at the end of a title or heading.
* Do not enter them in uppercase.
* Do not make references to headings (eg, cf. I.1) because their numbers will be deleted.
Citations:
* Short: roman (upright) and quoted in the text. The preferred options quotes "French", as here. For quotes "English", to distinguish opening and closing.
o The beginning of the quote is melted in the text but it ends in a complete sentence (end to outside). Example: Mrs. Lepic compares hair Hair Carrot to "drumsticks. It would use a pot of ointment every morning if we gave him. "
o The quote begins with a complete sentence and is introduced by a colon if it follows the text, his first word takes a capital initial (end-point inside). Ex: two centuries before our era, the poet Terence said: "I am human and nothing human is alien to me. "* Long
: present them as a normal paragraph, but with a line break before and after quotation marks.
* Any abolition or cut, in a quotation should be marked [...] and any connection or personal comment in a quote from another writer.
* Quotations from more than 10 lines, taken from a book of less than 70 years post mortem may be subject to reproduction rights.
Bibliography:
* Do put as initial capitalization of proper names (use small capitals for the rest of the name). * For a title
Monograph:
o Nicolas M., Britain,
A European destiny, Rennes, Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 2001.
* For a contribution to a collective work or a journal article:
o Baubérot J., "Secularism as a secular act," J. Baldwin Portier and P. (Ed.), Secularism
. Worth today?, Rennes, Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 2001, coll. "Res Publica" p. 39-50.
o Walter R., "Mr. Park Zola," The Eye
, No. 272, March 1978, p. 18-25.
* Notes:
o The example above uses small caps after the initial (not all capitals on the names). O The order
full name, use small capitals and abbreviation of names are optional, the whole is to define "his" standard and stick to the whole work (including for readers).
* Avoid references to the U.S.: Nicolas M. (2001), Britain a European destiny ...
Footnotes: *
General rule. - The superscript and enter without brackets.
* Offering. - The footnote is placed before any punctuation mark. Examples:
o How do I place my call note1?
o The placement of the footnote takes ainsi2.
o For example: "Put your call correctly note 3. "
o said your" call note4 "is well placed.
Footnotes page:
* Number them continuously
* The rules of composition and harmonization are identical to those listed in the Bibliography section (cf. above).
* Do not make references to numbers of notes.
* Example of use of ibid and op. cit. in four successive notes:
o 1. Nicolas M., Britain, a European destiny, Rennes, Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 2001.
o 2. Ibid., P. 54.
No. 3. Walter R., "Mr. Park Zola," The Eye, No. 272, March 1978, p. 18-25.
o 4. Nicolas M., op. cit., p. 39.
Glossary:
* The current practice is to not put dots between the letters. Eg SNCF (not station).
* The abbreviations are in most cases lower-case (Vol., T., No, ms., Mss - not Vol. T. n.) ...
* Some common abbreviations:
o 1st, 1st, 2nd, 3rd (not 1st, 1st, 2nd , 3rd)
o fifteenth century (the figure in small capitals) (not XVI) o
chap. (Not c.., The latter meaning song)
o ed. (Editor, edition) (and not eds.)
o etc.. (And not so ...)
o p. (Not pp.)