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.)
Friday, October 19, 2007
Sunday, October 7, 2007
Thursday, October 4, 2007
Purple-blue Dress Pants
Instructions Deadline for articles
The texts will be limited to 6,000 words and 38,000 characters.
They will be sent in Word format.
The texts will be limited to 6,000 words and 38,000 characters.
They will be sent in Word format.
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