ITT: copy paste the bibliography/works cited page of your last paper

ITT: copy paste the bibliography/works cited page of your last paper

Works Cited
>Bahr, Ehrhard. “Nazi Cultural Politics: Intentionalism vs. Functionalism” In National Socialist Cultural Policy edited by Cuomo, Glenn. 5-22. First Ed. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1995.

>Beevor, Antony. Stalingrad The Fateful Siege 1942-1943. New York: Penguin Books, 1999
Müller, Rolf-Dieter and Ueberschär, Gerd R. Hitler’s War in the East, A Critical Assessment. New York: Berghahn Books, 2002.

>Passmore, Kevin. Fascism: A Very Short Introduction. 2nd ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002.

>Shirer, William L. The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, A History of Nazi Germany. Simon and Shuster: New York, 1960

>Schmitt, Carl. The Concept of the Political. Expanded Ed. The University of Chicago Press: Chicago, 2007

Other urls found in this thread:

web.stanford.edu/dept/spec_coll/uarch/exhibits/Narration.pdf
nytimes.com/2016/01/28/world/middleeast/israel-adolf-eichmann-holocausst.html?_r=0
scots-online.org/articles/Nostra_Vulgari_Lingua.asp
dsl.ac.uk/)
eebo.chadwyck.com/home)
ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1200815/
nice.org.uk/guidance/cg178/ifp/chapter/assessment
nhs.uk/chq/pages/2344.aspx?CategoryID=53
nhs.uk/Livewell/alcohol/Pages/alcohol-units.aspx
ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3325428/
who.int/classifications/icd/en/GRNBOOK.pdf
apps.who.int/classifications/icd10/browse/2016
classics.mit.edu/Aristotle/politics.5.five.html
forumromanum.org
berliner-zeitung.de/politik/hoecke-sote-rassismus-rede-afd-ruege-23389608
twitter.com/SFWRedditImages

FAAAAR too little works cited
what the fuck are you doing fucken fresher

this is actually the longest works cited page i have for this semester, and my papers have, so far, not been graded below a A-.

i know diversity of sources is vital but i'm not a history major and i cant justify going through so many sources with so little time, especially just for a dinky little 12 page paper.

if you were my student I'd fail you

>protip for your future endevours: Read the Introduction, read the conclusion, decide if it's useful, then use the index for specifics

B. Latane and S. Nida, Ten Years of Research on Group Size and Helping, Psychological Bulletin, 1981, Vol.89, no.2, p.308-24

C Browning, Ordinary Men: Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland, Penguin Books, London, UK, 1998

C. Browning, Review: Hitler’s Willing Participants, History and Memory, Vol. 8, No.1, 1996 pgs.88-108

C. Haney, C. Banks, P. Zimbardo, A Study of Prisoners and Guards in a Simulated Prison, Naval Research Review, no.30, 1973, pgs. 4-17.

C.Haney, C. Banks, P. Zimbardo, The Stanford Prison Experiment, “Slideshow and Audio Cassette”, as accessed from a website, web.stanford.edu/dept/spec_coll/uarch/exhibits/Narration.pdf (retrieved 27/10/2016)

D. Cesarani, Eichmann: His Life and Crimes, Vintage, London, UK, 2005

H. Arendt, Eichmann in Jerusalem, A Report on the Banality of Evil, Penguin, New York, USA, 1994

I. Kershner, Pardon Plea by Adolf Eichmann, Nazi War Criminal, Is Made Public, New York Times, Jan 27th 2016, [website], nytimes.com/2016/01/28/world/middleeast/israel-adolf-eichmann-holocausst.html?_r=0 (accessed 25/10/2016)

J. Waller, Becoming Evil: How Ordinary People Commit Genocide and Mass Killing. Oxford University Press, New York, USA, 2007

P. Levi, “The Gray Zone”, from The Drowned and the Saved, Abacus, London, UK, 2004

S. Milgram, Liberating Effects of Group Pressure, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1965, Vol.1, no.2, pgs 127-134

S. Milgram, Obedience to Authority: An Experimental View, Harper and Row Publishers, New York, USA, 1974

also Daniel Goldhagen's Hitler's Willing Executioners but I fucked up and didn't put it in my bibliography and cba to write out the full Cambridge citation

You need at least 10 academic sources to fly user

>if you were my student I'd fail you

you haven't even read the paper you presumptuous cunt.

i actually read my sources and quote extensively from them. you're probably one of those shitters who uses 50 sources withone quote from each scattered throughout the paper like cum on your ass.

you can fuck right off, especially since you haven't even posted your own bibliography. you don't even have a right to shit talk.

Considering we could find your paper through the citations you provided if we were bothered to do so, you could link the paper here.
I would like to see what an A- paper looks like.

how long is your paper?

I remember when people stopped using the term, 'bibliography,' in favor of, 'works cited.' It always pissed me off. Why do people like to change shit so much?

>Considering we could find your paper through the citations you provided

no, i highly doubt it.

i don't go to a prestigious uni (it's a state uni in NY), the professor is very young (mid-30s) and not particularly famous, and the class itself even younger (only formed 4 years ago i think).

>No Kershaw, Mommsen, Broszat, Evans, Pridham/Noakes, Jäckel or Browning
Jesus lad

~2500

Characters?

Pages

>5 sources

Are you fucking kidding me? Even for undergrad stuff I would still have at least 20 secondary sources and an ass load of primary ones. What sort of shit university do you go to?

>quote extensively from them

That's called regurgitation. You're missing the point of scholarship completely.

>Asch, Robert G. The Thirty Years War: The Holy Roman Empire and Europe, 1618-48. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1997.

>Bassett, Richard. For God and Kaiser: The Imperial Austrian Army From 1619 to 1918. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2015.

>Lockyer, Roger. Habsburg and Bourbon Europe, 1470-1720. London: Longman, 1974.

>Maland, David. Europe at War 1600 – 1650. Totowa: Rowman and Littlefield, 1980.

>Pennington, D. H. Seventeenth Century Europe. London: Longman, 1970.

>Rabb, Theodore K. The Effects of the Thirty Years War on the German Economy. The Journal of Modern History, Vol. 34, No. 1 (March 1962): 40-51.

>Rowan, Herbert H. The Peace of Westphalia Revisited. The Journal of Modern History, Vol. 33, No. 1 (March 1961): 53-56.

>Wilson, Peter H. The Thirty Year’s War: Europe’s Tragedy. Cambridge: Harbard University Press, 2009.

Kerensky, Aleksandr Fyodorovich. The Prelude to Bolshevism; the Kornilov Rebellion. New York: Haskell House Publishers, 1972.

Kowalski, Ronald I. The Russian Revolution: 1917-1921. London: Routledge, 1997.

White, James D. The Russian Revolution, 1917-1921: A Short History. London: Edward Arnold, 1994.

Millar, James R. Encyclopedia of Russian History. New York: Macmillan Reference USA, 2004.

Daly, Jonathan W., and Leonid Trofimov. Russia in War and Revolution, 1914-1922: A Documentary History. Indianapolis: Hackett Pub., 2009.

Swain, Geoff. The Origins of the Russian Civil War. London: Longman, 1996.

Brown, Archie, Michael Charles. Kaser, Gerald S. Smith, and Patricia Brown. The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Russia and the Former Soviet Union. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1994.

Ilʹin-Zhenevskiĭ, A. F. From the February Revolution to the October Revolution, 1917. New York: International Publishers, 1931.

fun thread

one of my worst papers:

David Orique, Journey to the headwaters: Bartolomé de las Casas in a comperative context. in: Catholic Historical Review, (2009), vol. 95

Thomas Aquinas, On Law, Morality and Politics. Indianapolis: Hackett Publishing Co., (1988), ST I-II, Q.90, A.I

Patricia Seed, Taking Possesion and Reading Texts: Establishing the Authority of Overseas Empires. The Williams and Mary Quarterly, vol. 49 (1992), p. 38

Las Casas, Historia de las Indias, bk. 3 cpas. 3,4,II, 440-442

Jonathan Barnes, Jacques Brunschwig, Myles Burnyeat en Malcolm Schofield. Science and Speculation: Studies in Hellenistic Theory and Practice.

Fransisco de Vitoria, De Indis. p.29-30 in Brian Tierney, The idea of natural rights: studies on natural rights, natural law, and church law, 1150-1625. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing (1997)

Randall Lesaffer, Europa: Een zoektocht naar vrede? 1453 – 1763. Leuven universiteitspers (1999), p.85

Anthony Pragden, Dispossessing the barbarian: the language of Spanish Thomism and the debate over the property rights of the American Indians. in: The Languages of Political Theory in Early-Modern Europe, Cambridge University Press (1987)

Anthony Pagden, Spanish Imperialism and the Political Imagination ~ Studies in European and Spanish-American Social and Political Theory 1513-1830, Yale University Press, New Haven & London, 1990

Anthony Pagden, The Fall of Natural Man: The American Indian and the Origins of Comparative Ethnology. Cambridge Iberian and Latin American Studies, Cambridge University Press (1982) p.55

>That's called regurgitation. You're missing the point of scholarship completely.

Come on. The average undergrad has not yet acquired the knowledge and capacities necessary to do original research. He needs a solid knowledge of a period, extensive knowledge of a subject, and a mastery of the relevant source material.

Almost every undergrad paper boils down to a synthesis of existing scholarship. Either that or it's full of assumptions and leaps to conclusions.

This was for my paper in my degree capstone course. Had to be 15-20 pages, mine ended up at 19.

Topic was [spoiler]Morale and motivation of German soldiers on the Eastern front from summer 1941 to winter 42/43[/spoiler]

[spoiler]I got the best grade in the class on it[/spoiler]

Bartmann, Erwin. Für Volk und Führer: The Memoir of a Veteran of the 1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler. Helion and Company. 2013.

Bartov, Omer. Hitler’s Army: Soldiers, Nazis, and War in the Third Reich. Oxford University Press. 1991.

Bidermann, Gottlob Herbert. In Deadly Combat: A German Soldier’s Memoir of the Eastern Front. University Press of Kansas. 2000.

Fritz, Stephen G., Frontsoldaten: The German Soldier in World War II. The University Press of Kentucky. 1995.

Fritzsche, Peter. Life and Death in the Third Reich. Harvard University Press. 2008.

Fuchs, Karl. Ed. by Richardson, Horst Fuchs and Showalter, Dennis E. Sieg Heil!: War Letters of Tank
Gunner Karl Fuchs, 1937-1941. Archon Books. 1987

Jarausch, Konrad H. Reluctant Accomplice: A Wehrmacht Soldier’s Letters from the Eastern Front. Princeton University Press. 2011.

Koschorrek, Günter K. Blood Red Snow: The Memoirs of a German Soldier on the Eastern Front. Greenhill Books. 2002.

Manz, Bruno. A Mind in Prison: The Memoir of a Son and Soldier of the Third Reich. Brassey’s. 2000.

Patrick, Stephen B. War in the East Section I: The Russo-German Conflict. Simulations Publications. 1977.

Reese, Willy Peter. A Stranger to Myself: The Inhumanity of War: Russia, 1941-44. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. 2005.

words

Antony Beeeeevor's Stalingrad is brutal to read at points, but his Battle of Berlin book is even more explicitly depressing due to all the detail

>not using BibTeX

are you all plebs or some shit?

do you guys literally write out all your citations instead of using a CSL and bibtex?

>Jarausch, Konrad H
He's my boss (in a way).

Are you dense? You still need to publish/send the paper with a reference list.
>BibTex
Seriously bad for historians.

My reference list would be too long. Here are my sources though:
BStU, MfS, BV Berlin, Abt. XX.
BStU, MfS, BV Berlin, AKG.
BStU, MfS, BV Berlin, KD Lichtenberg.
BStU, MfS, BV Cottbus, Abt. XX.
BStU, MfS, BV Cottbus, AKG, Nr. 1500.
BStU, MfS, BV Dresden, KD Bischofswerda.
BStU, MfS, BV Dresden, KD Görlitz.
BStU, MfS, BV Dresden, KD Leipzig-Land.
BStU, MfS, BV Dresden, KD Löbau,
BStU, MfS, BV Halle, KD Aschersleben.
BStU, MfS, BV Halle, KD Dessau.
BStU, MfS, BV Halle, KD Halle.
BStU, MfS, BV Halle, KD Hohenmölsen.
BStU, MfS, BV Halle, KD Weißenfels.
BStU, MfS, BV Halle, KD Wittenberg.
BStU, MfS, BV Halle, KD Zeitz.
BStU, MfS, BV Karl-Marx-Stadt, Abt. VII.
BStU, MfS, BV Karl-Marx-Stadt, AKG.
BStU, MfS, BV Karl-Marx-Stadt, KD Annaberg.
BStU, MfS, BV Karl-Marx-Stadt, KD Karl-Marx-Stadt.
BStU, MfS, BV Karl-Marx-Stadt, KD Klingenthal.
BStU, MfS, BV Karl-Marx-Stadt, KD Schwarzenberg.
BStU, MfS, BV Leipzig, Abt. XX.
BStU, MfS, BV Leipzig, KD Leipzig-Stadt.
BStU, MfS, BV Magdeburg, Abt. XX.
BStU, MfS, BV Potsdam, Abt. VII.
BStU, MfS, BV Potsdam, Abt. XX.
BStU, MfS, BV Potsdam, AKG.
BStU, MfS, BV Potsdam, KD Rathenow.
BStU, MfS, BV Schwerin, KD Perleberg.
BStU, MfS, BV Suhl, Abt. XX.
BStU, MfS, BV Suhl, KD SM.
BStU, MfS, HA XX.
BStU, MfS, HA XX/AKG.
BStU, MfS, HA XXII.
BStU, MfS, Karl-Marx-Stadt, KD Freiberg.
BStU, MfS, Karl-Marx-Stadt, KD Reichenbach.
DRA, G006-01-05.
DRA, H006-01-06.
Gespräch mit Matthias Hopke [Anhang 6].
LAB, C Rep. 121, Nr. 462.
LAB, C Rep.104, Nr. 2248.
o. A.: Hitparade, in: Melodie und Rhythmus 20. 1977, S. 6.

>so few citations

Were you writing a middle school history essay?

>make a pretentious thread about bibliographies
>people tell you the truth - that your bibliography is shallow, and needs to be expanded
>get mad
>call other poster pretentious

>Arendt

A Articles/Books/Reports

Brownlie, Ian, Principles of Public International Law (Oxford University Press, 7th ed, 2008)


Franck, Thomas, ‘Who Killed Article 2(4)? Or: Changing Norms Governing the Use of Force by States’ (1970) 64 American Journal of International Law 809

Gertner, Robert and Picker, Randal, Game Theory and the Law (Harvard University Press, 1994)


Kessler, Oliver and Werner, Wouter ‘Expertise, Uncertainty and International Law: A study of the Tallinn Manual on Cyberwarfare’ (2013) 26 Leiden Journal of International Law 793


Schachter, Oscar ‘The Lawful Resort to Unilateral Use of Force’ (1984) 10 Yale Journal of International Law 291

Schmitt, Michael ‘Computer Network Attack and the Use of Force in International Law: Thoughts on a Normative Framework’ (1999) 37 Columbia Journal of Transnational Law 885
Schmitt, Michael et al, Tallinn Manual on the International Law Applicable to Cyber Warfare (Cambridge University Press, 2013)

Schmitt, Michael, ‘Cyber Operations and the Jud Ad Bellum Revisited’ (2011) 56 Villanova Law Review 569
Shackelford, Scott and Andres, Richard, ‘State Responsibility for Cyber Attacks: Competing Standards for a Growing Problem’ (2011) 42 Georgetown Journal of International Law 971


Wagner, Breanne ‘Cyber Attacks in Estonia Serve as a Wake-up Call’ (2007), 92 National Defense 26
B Cases


The Case of the S.S Lotus (France v Turkey) (Judgment) [1927] PCIJ (ser. A) No.10


Military and Paramilitary Activities (Nicaragua v United States of America) (Merits) [1986] ICJ Rep 14
C Other

Arimatsu, Louise, ‘A Treaty for Governing Cyber-Weapons: Potential Benefits and Practical Limitations’ (Paper presented at the 4th International Conference on Cyber Conflict, 2012)

Wrenn, Christopher Fitzgerald, Strategic Cyber Deterrence (Phd Thesis, Tufts University, 2012)

‘International Strategy for Cyberspace: Prosperity, Security and Openness in a Networked World’ (Declaration of Policy, The White House, May 2011)

Byock, Jesse L. "Saga Form, Oral Prehistory, and the Icelandic Social Context." New Literary
History 16.1, Oral and Written Traditions in the Middle Ages (1984): 153-73. JSTOR.
Web. 27 Nov. 2016.
Byock, Jesse L. The Saga of the Volsungs: The Norse Epic of Sigurd the Dragon Slayer.
Berkeley, CA: U of California, 1990. Print.
Jacobsen, Grethe. The Position of Women in Scandinavia during the Viking Period. Madison,
WI: U of Wisconsin, 1978. Print.
Jochens, Jenny M. "Consent in Marriage: Old Norse Law, Life, and Literature." Scandinavian
Studies 58.2, Early Law and Society (1986): 142-76. JSTOR. Web. 27 Nov. 2016.
Mauss, Marcel, and E. E. Evans-Pritchard. The Gift: Forms and Functions of Exchange in
Archaic Societies. New York: Norton, 1967. Print.
Miller, William Ian. Bloodtaking and Peacemaking : Feud, Law, and Society in Saga Iceland.
Chicago, US: University of Chicago Press, 2009. ProQuest ebrary. Web. 27 November
2016.
Schulman, Jana K. "Make Me a Match: Motifs of Betrothal in the Sagas of the Icelanders."
Scandinavian Studies 69.3 (1997): 296-321. JSTOR. Web. 09 Dec. 2016.
Smiley, Jane. “Gisli’s Saga.” The Sagas of the Icelanders: a Selection, Penguin, London, 2001.
Smiley, Jane. “The Saga of the People of Laxardal.” The Sagas of the Icelanders: a Selection,
Penguin, London, 2001.

Sorry if the formatting is royally fucked

>not citing goldhagen

:^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^)

PhD here. For a student paper it can be perfectly fine to have only 5-7 referenced works if you go deep into the sources. It really depends on what the task is.
When I learned about antiquity some people even ask their students to limit their references to 3 articles only and focus on the sources. It just really depends.
Also the amount of papers cited is rarely and indication of quality. It's far more weird that Carl Schmitt and a shitty "very short introduction" is on the list whereas the only paper cited is over 20 years old (also a monography from 1960? wtf?). So yeah you can tell he largely ignored recent research but that's because he is probably a freshman.
BTW I hate it when people don' even try to read German when writing about Germany.

>unironically citing goldenhagen

holy shit ur worse than op

Mate I hope you didn't hand it in yet cause it's so fucked it's wrong.

A lot of here seems genuinely interesting.

Tell me what you wrote about and what you discovered please.

Kys. How can you even tell whether he disagress or agrees with Goldhagen? Fucking wiki warrior cunt.

You sorted that list based on the prenoms bro. Like what the fuck, use a citation manager.

ITT: menial workers, skimmers, and myopics

>Machiavelli: Prince
>Montaigne: Essays
>Rochefoucauld: Aphorisms
>Sallust: Works
>Stirner: Ego/Unique One
>Thucydides: Peloponnesian War

>Machiavelli: Prince
>Montaigne: Essays
>Rochefoucauld: Aphorisms
>Sallust: Works
>Stirner: Ego/Unique One
>Thucydides: Peloponnesian War
>le edgemaster
Also this is not what OP asked for or you have no clue how to correctly cite those works.

• Agutter, Alex, ‘Middle Scots as a Literary Language’, in Jack, Roland D. S., and Craig, Cairns (eds), The History of Scottish Literature, (Aberdeen, 1988).
• Aitken, A.J., ‘Scottish Speech: a historical view with special reference to the Standard English of Scotland’, in Aitken, A.J., and McArthur, Tom, Languages of Scotland, (Edinburgh, 1979).
• Bald, Marjorie A., ‘Contemporary References to Scottish Speech of the 16th century’, in The Scottish Historical Review, Vol. XXV, No. 99, (Edinburgh, 1928).
• Butterfield, Glen, Bible Unity, (Bloomington, 2003).
• Campbell, Gordon, Bible: The Story of the King James Version 1611-2011, (Oxford, 2010).
• Corbett, John, Language and Scottish Literature, (Edinburgh, 1997).
• John Corbett, Written in the Language of the Scottish Nation: A History of Literary Translation Into Scots, (Bristol, 1999).
• Corbett, John, McClure, J. Derrick, and Stuart-Smith, Jane (eds.), The Edinburgh Companion to Scots, (Edinburgh, 2003).
• Donovan, Anne, Niven, Liz, ‘The Scots language in Education’, in Bryce, T. G. K. and Humes, Walter, (eds), Scottish Education: Post-devolution, (Edinburgh, 2003).
• Gibbins, Henry de Beltgens, Industry in England: Historical Outlines, (London, 2015).
• Goodare, Julian, State and Society in Early Modern Scotland, (Oxford, 1999).
• Görlach, Manfred, A textual history of Scots, (Heidelberg, 2002).
• Grueber, Herbert A., Handbook of the Coins of Great Britain and Ireland in the British Museum, (London, 1899).
• Horsbroch, Dauvit, Nostra Vulgari Lingua, scots-online.org/articles/Nostra_Vulgari_Lingua.asp
• Jack, Roland D. S., ‘The Language of Literary Materials: Origins to 1700’, in Charles Jones (ed.), The Edinburgh History of the Scots Language, (Edinburgh, 1997).
• Jones, Charles, A language suppressed: the pronunciation of the Scots language in the 18th century, (Edinburgh, 1995).

• Jones, Charles, The English Language in Scotland: An Introduction to Scots, (Edinburgh, 2002).
• Kay, Billy, Scots: The Mither Tongue, (Edinburgh, 1986).
• Kopaczyk, Joanna, The Legal Language of Scottish Burghs: Standardization and Lexical Bundles (1380-1560), (New York, 2013).
• Kinghorn, Alexander Manson, ‘Scots Literature and Scottish Antiquarians, 1750-1800’, in The University of Texas Studies in English, Vol. XXXIII, (Austin, 1954).
• Laing, Margaret, Lass, Roger, ‘Early Middle English Dialectology’, in van Kemenade, Ans, and Los, Bettelou, (eds) The Handbook of the History of English, (Hoboken, 2009).
• Law, T. G., Catholic tractates of the sixteenth century, 1573-1600, (Edinburgh, 1901).
• Macafee, Caroline, ‘Traditional dialect in the modern world: A Glasgow case study’, in University of Bamberg Studies in English Linguistics, Vol. XXXV, (Bamberg, 1994).
• Macafee, Caroline, ‘Older Scots Lexis’, in Charles Jones (ed.), The Edinburgh History of the Scots Language, (Edinburgh, 1997).
• McClure, J. Derrick, ‘Lowland Scots: an ambivalent national tongue’, in McClure, J. Derrick, (ed.), Scots and its Literature, (Amsterdam, 1995).
• McCluskey, Raymond, The Scots College Rome 1600-2000, (Edinburgh, 2000).
• Murison, David, ‘The Historical Background’ in Aitken, A.J. and McArthur, Tom, (eds.), Languages of Scotland, (Edinburgh, 1979).
• Nicholls, Andrew D., The Jacobean Union: A Reconsideration of British Civil Policies Under the Early Stuarts, (Westport, 1999).
• Pollock, G. H., Murray, Scottish Nationality, (London, 2001).
• Robinson, Christine and Ó Maolalaigh, Roibeard, ‘The Several Tongues: The Languages of Scotland, 1314-1707, in Brown, Ian, Clancy, Thomas, Manning, Susan, Pittock, Murray (eds), The Edinburgh History of Scottish Literature: From Columba to the Union (until 1707), (Edinburgh, 2006).

• Smith, Jeremy J., ‘Scots and English in the Letters of John Knox’, in Kevin J. McGinley and Nicola Royan (eds), The Apparelling of Truth: Lterature and Literary Culture in the Reign of James VI; A Festschrift for Roderick J. Lyall, (Cambridge, 2010), pp 4-11.
• Stuart Smith, Jane, ‘Television can also be a factor in language change: evidence from an urban dialect’, in Language, Vol. LXXXIX, No. 3, (Washington, 2013).
• Templeton, Janet, ‘Scots: An outline history’, in A.J. Aitken (ed.), Lowland Scots, Occasional Papers n2, (Edinburgh, 1973).
• Watt, L. M., Douglas’ Eneid, (Cambridge, 1920).
• Williamson, Keith, ‘Changing spaces’, in Irma Taavitsainen, (ed.), Placing Middle English in Context, (Berlin, 2000).
• Unger, Johann Wolfgang, in The Discursive Construction of the Scots Language: Education, politics and everyday life, (Amsterdam, 2013).

• Anonymous, The Complaynt of Scotland, (Paris, 1548). (found in John Leyden, The Complaynt of Scotland: Written in 1548. With a preliminary dissertation, and glossary, (Edinburgh, 1801)).
• Arbuthnot, Alexander, The Bassandyne Bible, (Edinburgh, 1579), in M’crie, Thomas D. D., The Life of Andrew Melville, (Edinburgh, 1819).
• Dictionary of the Scots Language (dsl.ac.uk/)
• Early English Books Online (eebo.chadwyck.com/home)
• Queen Elizabeth I to Mary, Queen of Scots, 1565 (found in Keith, Robert, The History of the Affairs of Church and State in Scotland: From the Beginning of the Reformation in the Reign of King James V. to the Retreat of Queen Mary Into England, Anno 1568, (Edinburgh, 1734), Vol. I, Appendix, pp 172-3).
• Görlach, Manfred, (ed.) The Minute Book of Tyninghgame, user, 1634.
• Holinshed, Raphael, Holinshed’s Chronicles of England, Scotland and Ireland, (London, 1577), (John Hooker et al. (eds.), (London, 1808) p. 910).

• Nisbet, Murdoch, The New Testament in Scots, c. 1520, in Law, T. G., The New Testament in Scots, (Edinburgh, 1901).
• Robinson, Christine, Ó Maolalaigh, Roibeard (eds) Kirk Minutes from Elgin, 1619.
Printed Contemporary Literature

• Douglas, Gavin, Virgil’s Aeneid, 1515.
• Drummond, William, The history of Scotland, from the year 1423 until the year 1542 containing the lives and reigns of James the I, the II, the III, the IV, the V : with several memorials of state, during the reigns of James VI & Charls I, 1655.
• Florio, John, Florio His Firste Fruites: A Perfect Introduction to the Italian and English Tongues (London, 1578).
• James VI, Basilikon Doron, (Edinburgh, 1599).
• James VI, Basilikon Doron, (London, 1603).
• Knox, John, An answer to a letter of a Jesuit named Tyrie, (Edinburgh, 1572).
• Knox, John, Heir followeth the coppie of the ressoning which was betuix the abbote of Crosraguell and John Knox, in Mayboill concerning the masse, in the yeare of God, a thousand fiue hundreth thre scoir and two yeares, (1563, Edinburgh).
• Knox, John, History of the Reformation in Scotland, (Edinburgh, 1562).

>Word of God. "Word of God" In Word of God edited by God, Y.W.H. Infinity. First Ed. Heaven Street, Heaven, 0000.

Ez

O know you are memeing but your citation is wrong. One can't even tell whether you used a christian or an protestant edition.
>not pointing out when online resources were last retrieved
-5%
Rest looks good although I don't why so few people read journals ITT.

Word of God doesn't have an edition, heathen

>he reads the King James Bible and believes it is the word of God
>laughingorthodox.tiff

I don't have to read a book to hear the Word of God. Maybe if you weren't such a shit he'd give it to you direct too.

>Also this is not what OP asked for
He said "your last paper", he didn't specify that it had to be academic.

I'll say it again.
>ITT: Menial, skimming, myopics.
and I'm not the only one who noticed:

(1/2)

This is from a paper on tribute collection in the Delian League, prior to the Peleponnesian War.

Sources:

Epigraphy:

Historische Griechische Inschriften in Übersetzung, Bd. 1: Die archaische und klassische Zeit, hg. v. K. Brodersen u.a., Darmstadt 1992 (HGIÜ I).
A Selection of Greek Historical Inscriptions to the End of the Fifth Century B.C., hg. v. R.Meiggs / D. Lewis, Oxford 21988 (ML).

Literature:

Aristophanes, Sämtliche Komödien, hg. v. L. Seeger / O. Weinreich, Zürich 1952.
Aristoteles, Der Staat der Athener, hg. v. Martin Dreher, ND 2009.
Isokrates, Sämtliche Werke, hg. v. Ch. Ley-Hutton / K. Brodersen, Stuttgart 1993.
Plutarch, Fünf Doppelbiographien, hg. v. Manfred Fuhrmann, Berlin 22001.
Thukydides, Geschichte des Peloponnesischen Krieges, hg. v. G. P. Landmann, Darmstadt 1993.

Numismatics:

Catalogue of the Greek Coins in the British Museum 11. Attica – Megaris – Aegina, hg. v. Arnaldo Forni, Bologna 1963 (BMCGr XI).

Literature:

W. Ameling, Plutarch, Perikles 12-14, Historia 34 (1985) 47-63.
H. Cancik / H. Schneider (Hgg.), Der Neue Pauly. Enzyklopädie der Antike, Stuttgart / Weimar 1996 ff (DNP).
J. Camp / J. Kroll, The Agora Mint and Athenian Bronze Coinage, Hesperia 70 (2001) 127-162.
T. Figueira, The Power of Money. Coinage and Politics in the Athenian Empire, Philadelphia 1998.
Chr. Howgego, Geld in der antiken Welt. Eine Einführung, Darmstadt 22011.
H. Kalcyk, Untersuchungen zum attischen Silberbergbau. Gebietsstruktur, Geschichte und Technik, Europäische Hochschulschriften Reihe III: Geschichte und ihre Hilfswissenschaften 160, Frankfurt 1982.
L. Kallet-Marx, Did Tribute fund the Parthenon?, CSCA 8 (1989) 252-266.
P. Liddel, The Places of Publication of Athenian State Decrees from the 5th Century BC to the 3rd Century AD, ZPE 143 (2003) 79-93.
W. Loomis, Wages, welfare costs and inflation in classical Athens, Ann Arbor 1998.
M. Miles, The Lapis Primus and the older Parthenon, Hesperia 80 (2011) 657-675.
L. Samons, Empire of the Owl. Athenian Imperial Finance, Historia Einzelschriften 142, Stuttgart 2000.
U. Wartenberg, After Marathon. War, Society and Money in Fifth-Century Greece, London 1995.

>He said "your last paper", he didn't specify that it had to be academic.
Even a student paper has to cite correctly. In fact it's even more important to do that since nobody cares about your thesis anyway. You failed miserably at that
>Salust: Works
Fucking pathetic.
You noted the publishers of the editions but no the translators which is a mistake bro.

>>Passmore, Kevin. Fascism: A Very Short Introduction. 2nd ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002.

Any good dearest user?

Student papers are academic, idiot. And there are several editions of the complete "salust".

>>make a pretentious thread about bibliographies

what in the literal fuck is pretentious about papers.

are you that shit talker who didn't even post one of his bibliographies?

jesus christ you're one salty bitch.

>So yeah you can tell he largely ignored recent research but that's because he is probably a freshman.

yes i ignored recent research because i'm not a bloody history major you fucking twat, i'm taking classes for two of the most brutal languages for a native english speaker, japanese and chinese. there is literally not enough time in the day or year for me to read as much as you pretentious cunts say i should, and you yourselves probably don't even reach that standard because you shitpost on a 14th century german illuminated manuscript BB all day. and btw, reading shit on wikipedia or 4chans doesn't count as academic.

my history class that i wrote the paper for is merely a requirement class and is actually focused on japan, and i had tried to write a paper on that first.

but i don't have to justify myself to a bunch of shitposting lethally drunk finns stuck in their houses for the winter.

it's no joke when it's says a "very short"

it's like not even 150 pages in a small 6in x 3in booklet at 11-12 font.

>it's like not even 150 pages
Oh, hopefully very expense-less then.

You spew a lot of venom, want to open up to us?

>btw, reading shit on wikipedia or 4chans doesn't count as academic.
You say that as if it's a bad thing. Veeky Forums is way more entertaining and honest than academia.


You seem to associate fun with guilt, perhaps because society always told you not to waste time on things that divert time away from wageslavery preparation. Try and find some financially independent people on your campus, (retired/old people are the most common) and learn to love life and studies from them, rather than living through guilt and others expectations.

How many sources you need depends on the paper length, subject and reputation of the authors you cited.
You really don't need 30 sources for a 10 page paper.
I did a 15 page paper on diplomatic inmunity (lawfag) and I used some 20 sources, 5 native and 15 in English. My professor told me I didn't have to bother so much.

Evliya Çelebi, “Seyahatname,” ca. 1680
Ogier Ghiselin de Busbecq, “Travels in Constantinople and Asia Minor,” 1581
Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, “Letters from the Levant during the Embassy to Constantinople,” April 1, 1717

For a freshman-year history course. I've written papers in high school with more sources than this.

The bibliographies I see in here make me realize I'll probably have to write papers with similar-looking ones in the future, and that terrifies me desu.

I always find it humorous seeing so much attention and effort being placed at deconstructing National Socialism. Its almost as if there is some fear buried in the collective psyche of certain academics to where they expend their entire life deconstructing and delegitimizing it under the guise of humanist intentions.
If you're going to read 10 books that regurgitate the same thing 10 times then what was the point?
Psychology has become, and always been, a weapon of undermining while it parades itself as hidden knowledge for healing.

The referencing for this is absolutely fucked but it was a 2500 essay I did in about half a day.

I didn't know what photo to post so here's a photo of my bed.

Andreasen, Nancy C.
SchizophreniaBulletin, 1987, Vol.13(1), pp.9-22

American Psychiatric Association.Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders: DSM-IV. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Publishing, Inc.; 2000 [Retrieved 2008-07-04].ISBN 0-89042-024-6.Schizophrenia

Barreras, Amy Available at: ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1200815/ (Accessed: 8 December 2016).
Blann, Andrew D ; Kirkpatrick, Ursula ; Devine, Carol ; Naser, Salina ; Mccollum, Charles N
Atherosclerosis, 1998, Vol.141(1), pp.133-139
Boyle, Kimberley R ; Boyle, James G ; Fisher, Miles ; Mckay, Gerry
Practical Diabetes, 2014, Vol.31(7), pp.304-305a

Carson, VB (2000).Mental health nursing: the nurse-patient journeyW.B. Saunders.ISBN 978-0-7216-8053-8. p. 638.

Colman, A. M. (2001)Oxford Dictionary of Psychology, Oxford University Press.ISBN 0-19-860761-X

Committee, J.F. (2014)British national Formulary (BNF). London, United Kingdom: Pharmaceutical Press.
Flynn, Adrian ; Cox, David
Addiction, 2006, Vol.101(6), pp.898-898
Foody, Joanne M. ; Benner, Joshua S. ; Frishman, William
The Journal of Clinical Hypertension, 2007, Vol.9(4), pp.271-275

Hindmarch, I. (1995) ‘Effects of zopiclone on quality of life in insomnia’,European Psychiatry, 10, pp. 91s–94s. Doi: 10.1016/0924-9338(96)80087-3.

Insel, Thomas R. (2010). "Rethinking schizophrenia".Nature.468(7321): 187–93.doi:10.1038/nature09552.PMID21068826.

Lawless, M.H., Harrison, K.A., Grandits, G.A., Eberly, L.E. and Allen, S.S. (2015) ‘Perceived stress and smoking-related behaviors and symptomatology in male and female smokers’,Addictive Behaviors, 51, pp. 80–83. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2015.07.011.

NICE (2014)Psychosis and schizophrenia in adults: Prevention and management. Available at: nice.org.uk/guidance/cg178/ifp/chapter/assessment (Accessed: 8 December 2016).

NHS (2016)What are the health risks of smoking?Available at: nhs.uk/chq/pages/2344.aspx?CategoryID=53 (Accessed: 8 December 2016).

NHS (2016a)Alcohol units. Available at: nhs.uk/Livewell/alcohol/Pages/alcohol-units.aspx (Accessed: 8 December 2016).
Kluge, Michael ; Schacht, Alexander ; Himmerich, Hubertus ; Rummel-Kluge, Christine ; Wehmeier, Peter M. ; Dalal, Mira ; Hinze-Selch, Dunja ; Kraus, Thomas ; Dittmann, Ralf W. ; Pollmächer, Thomas ; Schuld, Andreas
Schizophrenia Research, January 2014, Vol.152(1), pp.255-260

Koh-Banerjee, P., Wang, Y., Hu, F.B., Spiegelman, D., Willett, W.C. and Rimm, E.B. (2004) ‘Changes in body weight and body fat distribution as risk factors for clinical diabetes in US men’,American Journal of Epidemiology, 159(12), pp. 1150–1159. doi: 10.1093/aje/kwh167

Pernice‐duca, Francesca
Journal of Marital andFamilyTherapy, 2010, Vol.36(1), pp.13-27

Puri, B.K., Laking, P.J., Treasaden, I.H., P. J. Laking MB ChB BSc MRCPsych and I. H. Treasaden MB BS LRCP MRCS FRCPsych LLM (2011)Textbook of psychiatry. New York: Churchill Livingstone.
Sawitri S. ; Passchier, Jan
Health Psychology, 2014, Vol.33(3), pp.214-221

Semple,David."Oxford hand book of psychiatry" Oxford press, 2005

Shin, H.-W. and Chung, S.J. (2012) ‘Drug-induced Parkinsonism’, 8(1). Available at ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3325428/ (Accessed: 8 December 2016)

The ICD-10 classification of mental and Behavioural disorders diagnostic criteria for research world health organization Geneva(no date) Available at: who.int/classifications/icd/en/GRNBOOK.pdf (Accessed: 8 December 2016).

Timothy Andrew Carey ; Timothy Andrew Carey ; Warren Mansell
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 01 February 2014, Vol.8(NA), pp.NA-NA
Woodward, Kath (2015),Psychosocial Studies: An Introduction, New York, NY: Routledge, pp.3–4, 7–8,ISBN978-1-315-86782-3
Vanelli, Mark ; Coca-Perraillon, Marcelo ; Troxell-Dorgan, Amy
Clinical Therapeutics, 2007, Vol.29(12), pp.2768-2773
Valenstein, Marcia ; Kavanagh, Janet ; Lee, Todd ; Reilly, Peter ; Dalack, Gregory W ; Grabowski, John ; Smelson, David ; Ronis, David L ; Ganoczy, Dara ; Woltmann, Emily ; Metreger, Tabitha ; Wolschon, Patricia ; Jensen, Agnes ; Poddig, Barbara ; Blow, Frederic C
Schizophrenia Bulletin, 2011, Vol. 37(4), pp.727-736

World Health Organisation ICD-10 Available at: apps.who.int/classifications/icd10/browse/2016 (Accessed: 8 December 2016).

Yudofsky, Stuart C.; Hales, Robert E. (2002).The American Psychiatric Publishing Textbook of Clinical Psychiatry. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Association.ISBN1-58562-032-7.OCLC49576699

Question- have you researched the relationship between heroin/opiates abuse and schizophrenia? Or methamphetamine abuse and schizophrenia?

paragraphs.

kilobytes

>You spew a lot of venom

nigga that's my banter on a slow day. i haven't even questioned your worth as a human being. at the very least, i seriously doubt the existence of your balls if you're offended by some anonymous post on a sunday school forum.

how much of a sensitive boipussy do you have that you think this small bit of trashtalk is venomous?

>those twisted limbs

is she died

And this is why you need to specify which one you use, you retard. Jesus man pay attention to the introduction classes next time.
I was defending you while pointing out your mistakes. Sorry if this triggers you this hard. Now please point out where exactly I was shitposting. Also I can throw lists at your without problem but since my shit got publsihed you woiuld be able to track me down with it so yeah: not gonna do it.

>Don't you ever fucking reply to me again unless it's to seriously contribute to my thread

>the "banter" excuse

Could you be any more salty? Also calling people out on Veeky Forums while being on Veeky Forums is, well, retarded.

Oops. But it's for a first year writing course, pretty much the same format as my works cited for my midterm paper and I did pretty well on that, so I'm not really worried.

Okay so the essay wasn't that great and I didn't do much in depth research, I'm not really a humanities guy. I tried to take Mauss' The Gift/similar analyses of gift-giving in medieval Iceland and apply it to marriage in the sagas, focusing more on social bonds being created (or destroyed through divorce) rather than women as property.

I remember my Capstone. did 17 pages in 12 hours because my entire college life was shitposting here. Ended up doing well on it surprisingly.

"BBC NEWS | UK | N Ireland | Bomb Atrocity Rocks Northern Ireland." BBC News. BBC, 1998. Web. 08 Dec. 2016.
"BBC News | UK | Bomb Blast outside BBC." BBC News. BBC, 2001. Web. 08 Dec. 2016.


Evans, Jocelyn, and Tonge, Jonathan. "Menace Without Mandate? Is There Any Sympathy for “Dissident” Irish Republicanism in Northern Ireland?" Terrorism and Political Violence 24.1 (2011): 61-78. Web.


"Whitewashing Northern Ireland’s Notorious Murals." France 24. N.p., n.d. Web. 12 Nov. 2016.


Gallaher, Carol, and Peter Shirlow. "The Geography of Loyalist Paramilitary Feuding in Belfast." Space and Polity 10.2 (2006): 149-69. Web. 12 Nov. 2016.


Irish terrorists blamed for illegal gun trade in UK: Dissident republicans accused of swapping weapons for drugs." Guardian [London, England] 15 Oct. 2003: 10. Business Insights: Essentials. Web. 12 Nov. 2016.


Harris, Lyndsey. "Implications of a Strategic Analysis: The Operational Strategy of Loyalist Paramilitaries." Behavioral Sciences of Terrorism and Political Aggression 4.1 (2012): 4-25. Web. 12 Nov. 2016.


Horgan, John, and Morrison, John F. "Here to Stay? The Rising Threat of Violent Dissident Republicanism in Northern Ireland." Terrorism and Political Violence 23.4 (2011): 642-69. Web.


Little, Ivan. "Belfast Bomb Victim Adrian Ismay Gentle Giant Who Didn't Live to See New Grandchild." BelfastTelegraph.co.uk. N.p., 2016. Web. 07 Dec. 2016.


Muldoon, O., Trew, K., Todd, J., Rougier, N., & Mclaughlin, K.
"Religious and National Identity after the Belfast Good Friday Agreement." Political Psychology 28.1 (2007): 89-103. Web. 11 Nov. 2016.


Tonge, Jonathan, and Gomez, Raul. "Shared Identity and the End of Conflict? How Far Has a Common Sense of ‘Northern Irishness’ Replaced British or Irish Allegiances since the 1998 Good Friday Agreement?" Irish Political Studies 30.2 (2015): 276-98. Web. 11 Nov. 2016.

uppa ra

fucking how

Genuine autistic passion for the subject plus a shit load of sources plus an ocean of caffeine equals a alright paper I guess. I was shocked when I made a A+ in that class, considering I did a shitty presentation and my paper was finished mere minutes before I turned it in.

Never shit post here and do nothing but play Shogun 2 when you're supposed to be working on papers, kids

Also, nice selection of primary sources

Bibliography:
Abrahamian, Ervand. "'Ali Shari'ati: Ideologue of the Iranian Revolution." MERIP Reports 102
(1982): 24. Web.

Afary, Janet, and Kevin Anderson. "Revisiting Foucault and the Iranian Revolution, by Kevin
Anderson and Janet Afary, New Politics." New Politics. N.p., Summer 2004. Web. 12
Dec. 2016.

Chelkowski, Peter J. Eternal Performance: Taziyeh and Other Shiite Rituals. London: Seagull,
2010. Print.

Ersoy, Ahmet, Maciej GoÌrny, Vangelis Kechriotis, Michal KopecÌek, and BalaÌzs
TrencseÌnyi. Discourses of Collective Identity in Central and Southeast Europe (1770-
1945): Texts and Commentaries. Budapest: Central European UP, 2006. Print.

Halm, Heinz, and Allison Brown. Shi'a Islam: From Religion to Revolution. Princeton, NJ:
Markus Wiener, 1997. Print.

Hite, Katherine. "Historical Memory." SAGE Reference - Historical Memory. N.p., n.d. Web. 12
Dec. 2016.
Sacco, Joe. Gorazde: Safe Area. Seattle, WA: Fantagraphics, 2001. Print.

Sells, Michael. "Islam in Serbian Religious Mythology." Islam and Bosnia: Conflict Resolution
and Foreign Policy in Multi-ethnic States. Montreal: McGill-Queen's UP, 2002. 56-85.
Print.

Sells, Michael Anthony. The Bridge Betrayed: Religion and Genocide in Bosnia. Berkeley: U of
California, 1996. Print.

Swenson, Jill Diane. "Martyrdom: Mytho‐Cathexis and the Mobilization of the Masses in the
Iranian Revolution." Ethos 13, no. 2 (1985): 121-149.
Zivkovic, Marko. Serbian Dreambook: National Imaginary in the Time of Milosevic.
Bloomington: Indiana UP, 2011. Print.

Best ITT.

Primary Sources:
Arrian. The Landmark Arrian, The Campaigns of Alexander. Edited, James Romm. New York, NY: Anchor Books, 2010.
Aristotle. Politics. classics.mit.edu/Aristotle/politics.5.five.html
Justin. Epitome of the Philippic History of Pompeius Trogus. forumromanum.org /literature/justin /english/trans9.html#7
Plutarch. Parallel Lives. Translated by Bernadotte Perrin. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1919.

Secondary Sources:
Anson, Edward. Alexander the Great Themes and Issues. London: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2013.
Cawkwell, George. Philip of Macedon. London: Faber & Faber, 1978.
Green, Peter. Alexander of Macedon 356-323 B.C. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2013.
Muller, Sabine. “In the Shadow of His Father: Alexander Hermolaus, and the Legend of Philip.” In Philip II and Alexander the Great, edited by Elizabeth Carney and Daniel Ogden, 25-32. New York: Oxford University Press, 2010.
O’Brien, John Maxwell. Alexander the Great: The Invisible Enemy: A Biography. London: Routledge, 1992.
Roisman, Joseph. Alexander the Great Ancient and Modern Perspectives. Lexington, MA: D.C. Heath and Company, 1995.
Worthington, Ian. Alexander the Great a Reader. 2nd ed. New York, NY: Routledge, 2012.
Worthington Ian. Philip II of Macedonia. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2008.

>Never shit post here and do nothing but play Shogun 2

just got this game like a week ago

last total war game i played was shogun 1.

are matchlocks worth it? i went oda clan and basically have armies of spears and bows, with some sword inf scattered among them.

Matchlocks are great and a worthy addition to your army but don't rely on your ranged troops too much. Have you got Fall of the Samurai? It's almost better than the base game but it loses points for the AI being fucking retards and letting themselves get slaughtered by arty to much

>citing shirer
>history major

oh dog what done

i picked up the all the DLC in the steam sale for like $17.

to be honest the warring states era is my favorite period. oda nobunaga is just fascinating. i know im going to get flak for this but i like the japanese warring states era better than the chinese one.

Eh, you like what you like. Shogun 2 gave me inspiration to write a paper on the introduction of the Tanegashimas to Japanese warfare (I spent more than 12 hours on that one since I didn't know that much about Japanese warfare at the time outside of vidya) Didn't know they made several hundred thousand of the things. Try out Fall of the Samurai if you're into Victorian warfare meets ninjas and samurai. I don't really remember Rise of the Samurai that much.

Ha, just finished an 18-page paper this afternoon.

Primary
>Engels, Friedrich, "The Principles of Communism," 1847
>Lenin, V. I., "The Impending Catastrophe and How to Combat It." Priboi, St. Petersburg, 1917
>Lenin, V. I., “The State and Revolution.” Collected Works, Volume 25. 1918
>Stalin, J. V., "The Foundations of Leninism." 1924
>Stalin, J. V., “Concerning Questions of Leninism.” Works, Vol. 8 (January-November 1926)
>Stalin, J. V., “Dizzy with Success." Pravda, March 2, 1930
>Stalin, J. V., “Political Report of the Central Committee to the 16th Congress of the CPSU.” Pravda, June 29, 1930
>Trotsky, Leon, “The Workers’ State, Thermidor, and Bonapartism.” New Internationalism. Vol. II No. 4, 1935
>Trotsky, Leon, “Stalinism and Bolshevism.” Socialist Appeal, Vol. 1 No. 7. September 25th, 1937
>"History of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union." OGIZ Gosizdat, Moscow, 1938
>Scott, John, Behind the Urals: An American Worker in Russia’s City of Steel. Houghton Mifflin Company, Cambridge, 1942
>Khrushchev, Nikita, "Speech to 20th Congress of the C.P.S.U." February 24th, 1956

Secondary
>Schachtman, Max, Behind the Moscow Trial. Pioneer Publishers, New York, 1936
>Lewin, Moshe, Lenin’s Last Struggle. University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor, 1968
>Fitpatrick, Sheila, "Everyday Stalinism." Oxford University Press, 1990
>Van Ree, Erik, “Lenin’s Last Struggle Revisited.” Revolutionary Russia, Vol. 14, 2001
>Wolff, Richard D. and Resnick, Stephen A., Class Theory and History: Capitalism and Communism in the USSR. Routledge, New York, 2002
>Goldman, Wendy Z., Terror and Democracy in the Age of Stalin: The Social Dynamics of Repression. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2007
>Timasheff, Nicholas, “World Revolution or Russia.” The Structure of Soviet History, Ronald Suny Ed., Oxford University Press, 2013
>Khlevniuk, Oleg, Stalin: New Biography of a Dictator. Yale University Press, New York, 2015

It was pretty fun.

>all these nobodies

Where are Suny, Khlevniuk, Lewin, Kotkin, Voline, Figes, Fitzpatrick? Lenin himself? John Reed?

If you're right-wing you can include Malia, Conquest, Service, and Pipes as well.

I clearly have Browning cited you nonce
twice in fact, once IN REVIEW of Goldhagen's meme

>"Stop picking on my retardation and academic failure guys!" = bantz
That's not even acceptable for Canadian bantz. I'd fail you as well.

How can you cite Lenin's stuff from the 1910s and still cite it like an translation existed? I guess you used the collected and translated works but then you need to state the publisher, the translator and the year the volume came out.
>Khrushchev, Nikita, "Speech to 20th Congress of the C.P.S.U." February 24th, 1956
This is plain wrong. You need to say where you got the text from.

Also you need dots at the end of each item.
>Oops. But it's for a first year writing course, pretty much the same format as my works cited for my midterm paper and I did pretty well on that, so I'm not really worried.
Just use Citavi or Endnote and something and do it automatically. It's far less work.

On the Hamitic Hypothesis' impact on the Rwandan genocide~

Carney, James J. (2014). Rwanda Before the Genocide: Catholic Politics and Ethnic Discourse in the Late Colonial Era. New York: Oxford University Press.
Eltringham, Nigel (2004). Accounting for Horror: Post-Genocide Debate in Rwanda. London: Pluto Press.
Goldberg, David M. / Perani, Mauro (Hrsg.) (2005). The Words of a Wise Man’s Mouth are Gracious. Berlin: De Gruyter.
Geyer, Steven: „Lebensbejahender afrikanischer Ausbreitungstyp“ AfD-Spitze rügt Höckes Rassenkunde-Referat als parteischädigend, in Berliner Zeitung (2015) unter: berliner-zeitung.de/politik/hoecke-sote-rassismus-rede-afd-ruege-23389608 (abgerufen am 7.10.2016, 14:54)
Gould, Stephen J. (1996). The mismeasure of man. New York: WW Norton & Company.
Longman, Timothy (2010). Christianity and Genocide in Rwanda. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Mamdani, Mahmood (2001). When Victims Become Killers. Colonialism, Nativism and the Genocide in Rwanda. New Jersey: Princeton University Press.
Patai, Raphael / Graves, Robert (2014). Hebrew Myths: The Book of Genesis. OnlineVeröffentlichtung: Rosetta Books.
Sanders, Edith R. (1969). The hamitic hyopthesis; its origin and functions in time perspective. In: The Journal of African History, 10(4), 521–532.
Urvin, Peter (1997). Prejudice, Crisis and Genocide in Rwanda. In: African Studies Review, 40(2), 91–115.
Waters, Tony (1995). Tutsi Social Identity in Contemporary Africa. In: The Journal of Modern African Studies, 33(2), 343–347.
White, Kenneth R. (2009). Scourge of Racism. Genocide in Rwanda. In: Journal of Black Studies, 39(3), 471–481.

I'm no history major, just picking related things because they're interesting to me.

>this is actually the longest works cited page i have for this semester, and my papers have, so far, not been graded below a A-.

I guess some unis have different standards

1. Brown, Howard G. "An Unmasked Man in a Milieu De Memorie: The Abbe Solier as Sans-Peur the Brigand Priest." Historical Reflections 26, no. 1 (Spring 2000).
2. Burrows, Simon. "The Cultural Politics of Exile: French émigré Literary Journalism in London, 1793-1814." Journal of European Studies 29, no. 2 (June 1999). doi: 10.1177/004724419902900202
3. Carpenter, Kirsty. Refugees of the French Revolution: Émigrés in London, 1789-1802. Houndmills, Hampshire: Macmillan, 1999.
4. Daly, Gavin. "War and the French Revolution." Agora (Melbourne, Victoria) 51, no. 1 (March 2016):
5. Gendron, François. The Gilded Youth of Thermidor. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, 1993
6. Hill, George J. “The Story of the War in La Vendʹee and the Little Chouannerie”. New York, NY: D. & J. Sadlier, 1856
7. Oliver, Bette Wyn. Surviving the French Revolution: A Bridge across Time. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2013.
8. Palmer, Robert. The World of the French Revolution. New York, NY: Routledge, 2016.
9. Szajkowski, Zosa. "Jewish Emigrés during the French Revolution." Jewish Social Studies 16, no. 4 (October 1954)
10. Sinclair, John Gordon. The Effects of Delusion or, Materials towards a History of Two Invasions of France. The Secret Causes That Produced, and the Concealed Chain That Connected the Two Unfortunate Expeditions of Champaigne in 1792, and of Quiberon in 1795, Are Here Laid Open. London, 1796.

Not the best paper on emigres out there 2bh

>>protip for your future endevours: Read the Introduction, read the conclusion, decide if it's useful, then use the index for specifics

You're a pseud my friend. Chances are you're probably misrepresenting authors lots of times and your profs don't realize it because they can't read 15+ books just to grad one paper.

If you're going to cite extensively from a work, read it, whole. Even if it's a few hundred pages. If you just want to cite a few facts, your method is okay.

>Considering we could find your paper through the citations you provided if we were bothered to do so, you could link the paper here.

Not everything gets uploaded, you know..

>Are you fucking kidding me? Even for undergrad stuff I would still have at least 20 secondary sources and an ass load of primary ones.

Why the arbitrary numbers? Clearly OPs list is too short, but just saying "20 minimum" is almost as dumb.

Cool guy.

Also a cool guy.

>journals
>standard works
>all there
Looks good senpai but you forgot the dot for the AfD-article and you might consider using "[]" instead of "()" which would be the correct way to do it according to DIN (assuming you study in Germany)
Also there are some issues with the capitalization (Gould, Sanders). This stuff happens when the titles aren't correctly put in the database.

>Karl-Marx-Stadt

Hey, that's where I lived! Where you from, user? What was this paper on?

Berlin. Can't tell since it's online and so specific that I would be traceable. It's on the GDR tho.