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Research Guides@Tufts

Art and the Home

Why Cite?

Whenever you use an outside resource in your work-- whether you are quoting, referring, or appropriating-- you must give credit. Why?

Scholarship is a conversation: Good work doesn't spring fully formed from your brain -- it is the end result of critical engagement with the ideas and work of others. You should cite all books, articles, websites, images, etc. that directly inform your work, just as you would want others to give credit to what you create. Properly formatted citations in an accepted style (MLA, Chicago, APA, etc.) are essential to maintaining artistic and scholarly conversations. 

It is required: Tufts' Academic Integrity Policy specifically prohibits plagiarism. A key way to avoid plagiarising the work of others is to carefully cite all outside references. Your instructors have most likely indicated which citation style they want you to use, and provided some basic guidelines. See below for some additional resources that will help you format your citations. 

Citation Guides

For this class, you are required to use the Chicago style format:

Print Guides, Citation Management, and More

See the Tisch Library's Citing Sources guide for an exhaustive overview of citation styles, guides, and options for managing your bibliographies. 

Head of the W. Van Alan Clark, Jr. Library

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Darin Murphy
Contact:
W. Van Alan Clark, Jr. Library
SMFA at Tufts
230 The Fenway
Boston, MA 02115
Office: 617 627 0021