Students are free to use the Oxford History Faculty style, as outlined in this guide, or one of these approved standard international styles:
- MLA (Modern Language Association)
- MHRA (Modern Humanities Research Association)
- Chicago Manual of Style, 16th Edition (Notes & Bibliography not Author-Date)
The only absolute rule is that YOU MUST BE CONSISTENT in the style you use: once you have adopted a style for a thesis or article, use only that style throughout that particular work.
The choice between styles revolves around whether you wish to automate your footnotes and bibliography: the styles listed above are commonly available in citation management software, which enables you to import references automatically conforming to your chosen style. This involves some upfront investment in learning how to use the package. Using the Faculty style, on the other hand – or indeed adopting any of the approved styles for manual use – involves no initial electronic set-up, in that you enter all your references and bibliography yourself. But this means you must take responsibility for accuracy and consistency and thus familiarize yourself initially with both the broad norms of the style and its fine detail.
Note also that citations for some materials, especially archival sources or official publications, are not easily recorded in citation management software and may have to be added manually, even when many or most of your references are handled electronically. For these purposes you could use the guidance below, or you could adapt this to the main style you are using.
The choice between automatic and manual is entirely yours –as long as the results of whatever you do are consistent. Postgraduates are perhaps more likely to want to invest in learning a citation package, and are also more likely to have to use different styles: editors and publishers usually specify their own style for any particular work (such as conference proceedings and articles); this also means that, in time, you are likely to come across situations where you need to enter references manually.
Whatever you do, it is important that you take responsibility for your own practice. There are penalties for inadequate presentation, which includes culpable inconsistency in citation practice. However, you will not be penalized for the odd slip, as long as you are using or adapting a style with broad consistency. Please do not, therefore, ask Librarians, Tutors and Supervisors for advice about referencing individual items. Supervisors will point out if your practice is inadequate in general, but cannot be expected to scrutinize every last comma and bracket.