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Chicago Manual of Style, 18th Edition Eighteenth Edition [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 1192 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x152x60 mm, kaal: 1647 g, 12 halftones, 33 line drawings, 27 tables
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Sep-2024
  • Kirjastus: University of Chicago Press
  • ISBN-10: 0226817970
  • ISBN-13: 9780226817972
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 1192 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x152x60 mm, kaal: 1647 g, 12 halftones, 33 line drawings, 27 tables
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Sep-2024
  • Kirjastus: University of Chicago Press
  • ISBN-10: 0226817970
  • ISBN-13: 9780226817972
Teised raamatud teemal:
"The world has changed since 2017, and The Chicago Manual of Style is changing to meet the moment. The eighteenth edition of this classic guide for writers, editors, and publishers is the most extensive revision in two decades. Every chapter has been reexamined with diversity and accessibility in mind, and major changes include updated and expanded coverage of pronoun use and inclusive language, revised guidelines on capitalization, a broader range of examples, new coverage of Indigenous languages, and expanded advice on making publications accessible to people with disabilities. The Manual's traditional focus on nonfiction has been expanded to include fiction and other creative genres on topics such as punctuation and dialogue, and its attention to the needs of self-published authors has also widened. The citation chapters have been thoroughly reorganized for the benefit of new and experienced users alike, and the chapter on mathematics has been dropped, its key contents covered elsewhere in the Manual,where they will be useful to both generalists and specialists. Evolving technologies-from open-access publishing models to citations of AI content-are covered throughout. And of course there are well-considered updates to familiar rules, including a number of changes intended to align more closely with real-world usage. As with each new edition, devotees of the Manual will find much to discover and ponder here"--

The venerable, time-tested guide to style, usage, and grammar—an indispensable reference informing the editorial canon with sound, definitive advice. Now in its 18th edition!  More than 1.75 million copies sold!

Much has happened in the years since the publication of the seventeenth edition of The Chicago Manual of Style. The world has transformed, and the Manual has risen to meet the moment. The eighteenth edition of this classic guide for writers, editors, and publishers is the most extensive revision in two decades. 

Every chapter has been reexamined with diversity and accessibility in mind, and major changes include updated and expanded coverage of pronoun use and inclusive language, revised guidelines on capitalization, a broader range of examples, new coverage of Indigenous languages, and expanded advice on making publications accessible to people with disabilities. The Manual’s traditional focus on nonfiction has been expanded to include fiction and other creative genres in coverage of topics such as punctuation and dialogue, and the needs of self-published authors receive wider attention.

The citation chapters have been thoroughly reorganized for the benefit of new and experienced users alike, and the key concepts for editing mathematics have been integrated into the chapters where they will be most useful to generalists. Evolving technologies—from open-access publishing models to AI—are covered throughout. And naturally, there are some well-considered updates to familiar rules, including changes intended to align the Manual’s recommendations more closely with real-world usage.

As with every new edition, devotees of the Manual will find much to discover and ponder.

Arvustused

A vital reference for every book and magazine editor . . . the 18th edition [ of Chicago] embraces our times, while standing firm on certain fundamental ground rules . . . [ Chicagos] rules are meant not only for those of us who write and edit for a living but for anyone who writes and edits, which is to say everyone. * The Washington Post * Chicago isnt merely a guide . . . its like having a very smart and constantly accessible friend. * Benjamin Dreyer (Dreyer's English) * Citation is hard. How do you cite a dream? How do you cite dance? A musical performance? A piece of a painting? A map? A place in the sky? A thought? The eureka moment in an experiment? A memory? Or someone elses fantasy? Applying the same apparatus to the posts and tweets and sounds and videos we all now routinely share will take some doing. Were still working it out. Meanwhile, venerable, time-tested, and indispensablewe can thank our lucky stars for the work they do at Chicago. * Los Angeles Review of Books * The New Chicagos Here! The New Chicagos Here! After years of waiting, the 18th edition of The Chicago Manual of Style is here, and it brings some big changes. . . Inside, youll find new guidance on inclusive language, electronic publishing, self-publishing, editing fiction, AI, new media, and more. Check it out! * Jonathon Owen (Arrant Pedantry) * I dont mean to brag, but I am probably the only person on the planet who has taken The Chicago Manual of Style to all fifty U.S. states. I have hauled it onto airplanes, down the streets of multiple major metropolitan areas, onto beaches, and even up the side of a mountain in Alaska. I have a traveling pop-up grammar advice stand, called the Grammar Table, which I sit at in public places in order to answer the grammar questions of passersby. I like to have reference materials on the table in order to model the looking-things-up lifestyle I lead, and Chicago is part of that lifestyle. With my extra time, I salute this book!   * Ellen Jovin (Rebel With a Clause) * Beyond its exhaustive regulations, the Manual provides practical guidance on matters ranging from manuscript preparation to copyright and ethical issues. It acts as a guiding light through the opaque waters of publishing. In essence, The Chicago Manual of Style is the quintessential reference for anyone committed to the serious craft and art of writing and editing.   * David Shields (Reality Hunger) * The Chicago editor has all the time in the world to convert hyphens to en dashes. Unencumbered by daily deadlines, they breathe as easy as words on either side do with the extra room that the en dash grants them. Readers also feel that airiness and relief. They relax. They absorb. They process. They enjoy. Whos got time for all that?   * Jeffrey Barg (The Angry Grammarian) * In high school, I read an anthology called The Voice That Is Great Within Us: American Poetry of the Twentieth Century straight through from beginning to end. Chicago reminds me of that bookits nothing less than a poetry anthology, one you can read in sequence or dip into at your pleasure. Yes, of course I use it as a reference book. But isnt its purpose to help editors free the voice that is great within every author?   * Barbara Clark (for Lit Hub) * "The newest version of CMOS helpfully addresses topics that have become relevant since the publishing of CMOS 17, including updated standards for inclusivity and accessibility and information on handling internet culture, such as emojis and memes." * The Indexer *

The University of Chicago Press Editorial Staff represents the collective judgment of Press editors past and present, going back to 1892.