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Exercises Referencing (extra)

1. Fill in the gaps with the following information:


a) Page 186 from text from Paul Arthur: “Antipodean Myths Transformed: The Evolution of
Australian Identity” published in 2007 History Compass volume 5, from pages 182 to 188. DOI:
10.1111/j.1478-0542.2007.00467.x.
b) Page 22 from text from Robert Clarke: “Journeys to Another Country: Utopia, Melancholia and
Aboriginality in Travel Writing” published 2016 in his book Travel Writing from Black Australia:
Utopia, Melancholia, and Aboriginality from pages 22 to 44, from the publisher Routledge, in New
York.
c) Page 45 from Allaine Cerwonka’s book: Native to the Nation: Disciplining Landscapes and
Bodies in Australia published in 2004 by the publisher University of Minnesota Press, in
Minneapolis.
d) Page 25 from Ignacio Rojas: “Australian Mythscape and National Identity: Re-imagining
Australia” published in 2013 in the journal Creative Approaches to Research volume 6, number 2,
from pages 22 to 32.
e) Pages 27 to 28 from text from Ignacio Rojas: “Australian Mythscape and National Identity: Re-
imagining Australia” published in 2013 in the journal Creative Approaches to Research volume 6,
number 2, from pages 22 to 32.
f) Page 50 from Allaine Cerwonka: Native to the Nation: Disciplining Landscapes and Bodies in
Australia published in 2004 by the publisher University of Minnesota Press, in Minneapolis.

1.1.1 Chicago Notes and Bibliography style: Footnotes:


Australia has historically been imagined and considered in utopian terms a)___________________:
as a mythical land by Europeans b)__________________, as a land of equality and opportunity by
free settlers c)__________________, as the last stronghold of the white race by white Australians
who positioned themselves as the “new indigenous” d)__________________, displacing the
indigenous populations. The last enduring utopian vision is the image of the multicultural nation
where equality and opportunity are shared indiscriminately e) ____________________. Recently,
the image of the multicultural nation has been interrogated and these terms deconstructed f)
____________________.

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1.1.2 Chicago Notes and Bibliography style: Bibliography:

1.2.1 Chicago Author-Date style: In-text citation:


Australia has historically been imagined and considered in utopian terms a)___________________:
as a mythical land by Europeans b)__________________, as a land of equality and opportunity by
free settlers c)__________________, as the last stronghold of the white race by white Australians
who positioned themselves as the “new indigenous” d)__________________, displacing the
indigenous populations. The last enduring utopian vision is the image of the multicultural nation
where equality and opportunity are shared indiscriminately e) ____________________. Recently,
the image of the multicultural nation has been interrogated and these terms deconstructed f)
____________________.

1.2.2 Chicago Author-Date style: Bibliography:


2. Transform the following references that are given to you in an approximate MLA style into
Chicago Author-Date style:
2.1: Balakian, Anna, and James J. Wilhelm, editors. Proceedings of the Xth Congress of the
International Comparative Literature Association: New York, NY, 1982. Garland, Routledge,
1985.

2.2: Boyle, Jimmy. The Pain of Confinement: Prison Diaries. Edinburgh, Canongate, 1984.

2.3: Brevis, Stephen. “Music the Force Behind Star Wars.” The West Australian, 7 Jul. 2010,
thewest.com.au.
2.4: Courtright, Jeffrey L., and Peter M. Smudde. "Power and Public Relations." The
International Encyclopedia of Communication. Edited by Wolfgang Donsbach, London,
Blackwell Publishing, 2008, pp. 44-49.
2.5: Etherington, Ben, and Jarad Zimbler. "Field, Material, Technique: On Renewing
Postcolonial Literary Criticism." The Journal of Commonwealth Literature, vol. 49, no. 3, pp.
279-297, doi: 10.1177/0021989414538435.

2.1:

2.2:

2.3:

2.4:

2.5:

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