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  #1  
Old 01-04-2004, 01:17 PM
Richard T Eger Richard T Eger is offline
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Default Publishing - footnotes, chapter notes, source notes, & references

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Jukka Juutinen
Placement of footnotes
Fri Dec 12 02:20:11 2024
213.28.164.219

We now, I believe, basically agree that footnotes should be used in serious books of history. Now, where do you folks prefer them to be located? I mean, is a footnote apparatus at the end book satisfactory or should they be on appropriate pages (footnote expalantions on the same page as the primary text)? I certainly prefer the latter since I have noted how frustrating it is to shuffle back and forth if one wishes to check the note, especially if the note contains more than a source note. One excellent recent example is John Beeler´s "Birth of the Battleship" where appropriate footnotes are conveniently on the same page as the main text. Comments?
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  #2  
Old 01-04-2004, 01:17 PM
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From TOCH!:

David Ransome
Footnotes
Fri Dec 12 09:19:39 2024
195.92.168.175

Hi,
If the footnotes are brief, I prefer them on the same page.

I have, however, read books with lengthy footnotes on the relevant page and I find these to be very distracting from the point of view of text continuity. In these cases I would prefer them at the back of the book.

Regards,

David
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  #3  
Old 01-04-2004, 01:18 PM
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From TOCH!:

Marcel Hogenhuis
footnotes
Fri Dec 12 10:26:20 2024
217.122.92.115

Hello Jukka,

My thoughts on this:
1. first ask yourself for who you write a book. Is it for the historically minded local population in your region OR the airwar research community alone?
2. secondly, ask yourself whether you want a footnote system, that does match with your own taste or will satisfy the majority of your potential readers?

After much thinking, we (in Venlo) concluded that for a planned AIRFIELD VENLO IN WW-2 book, we will place footnotes AFTER each chapter. Why?
1. the people in our region are anxious to learn more about a German airfield near Venlo in WW-2. This number of readers will exceed the number of (hopefully) interested airwar researchers elsewhere on an estimated scale of 5:1
2. as you might have experienced yourself, some events are reconstructed on basis of 2-3 sources combined. This makes just one footnote 2-3 lines already, perhaps even longer, even when you will print those lines very small. IF each page contains 5-6 footnotes, THEN a proportionally large part of that page will contain footnotes. This is for a majority of the (less airwar adapted) readers unattractive, but very practical for airwar researchers like us.
2. if you put ALL footnotes, indexed by chapter, at the end of your book, airwar researchers will rightfully complain that they have difficulties to look for more details.
3. so, by putting the footnotes at the end of each chapter, we are convinced that we combine readability for most readers without doing the need for more details any harm.

I hope this will help the decision making process? Best wishes, Marcel Hogenhuis
Study Group Venlo Airfield in WW-2
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  #4  
Old 01-04-2004, 01:18 PM
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From TOCH!:

Jukka Juutinen
footnotes
Fri Dec 12 10:35:41 2024
213.28.161.65

I should have clarified that I am not writing a book, I simply expressed my preferences as a reader. I do still prfer notes on each page, but this may not be suited to small format books. Beeler´s book I referred to is of large 24 cm x 30 cm format allowing very nice layout without disturbance for even those who do not like these notes.

Jukka
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  #5  
Old 01-04-2004, 01:19 PM
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From TOCH!:

Steve W.
Agreed.....
Fri Dec 12 12:32:45 2024
64.12.96.76

Footnotes are so much more useful and easier to use if placed at the bottom of each page as was the practice for centuries. In the late 'sixties or early 'seventies some academics, apparently with nothing better to do, decided to move them to a special "Sources and Notes" section at the end of the book. With the reader still not inconvenienced enough, in their opinion, the academics then decided to place the foot notes at the end of each chapter. Today, unfortunately, it appears that "bottom-of-page" footnotes have fallen into disuse. However, if I ever write a book, that is exactly where I will put them, even if I have to publish the damn thing myself.

Steve W.
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  #6  
Old 01-04-2004, 01:20 PM
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From TOCH!:

Bengt Norman
I’m currently reading...
Fri Dec 12 12:28:51 2024
212.151.115.89

...Angels Eight by David Clark and thou I’m not going to give critic in any direction regarding this work, I must admit I almost (accidentally) tore the book apart jumping from text to footnotes. No shadow on David Clark, just a comment related to this topic.
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  #7  
Old 01-04-2004, 01:20 PM
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C. herrera
Angels Eight-what is your opinion?
Fri Dec 12 14:22:06 2024
4.34.205.228

Bengt,

I just bought Angels Eight and started reading it. Unfortunately, I have come accross some fallacies in the text. Can others jump in and tell me what they think of this book?

Thanks,

Carlos
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  #8  
Old 01-04-2004, 01:21 PM
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From TOCH!:

C. herrera
Angels Eight-what is your opinion?
Fri Dec 12 14:22:06 2024
4.34.205.228

Bengt,

I just bought Angels Eight and started reading it. Unfortunately, I have come accross some fallacies in the text. Can others jump in and tell me what they think of this book?

Thanks,

Carlos
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  #9  
Old 01-04-2004, 01:22 PM
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From TOCH!:

Sergio Luis dos Santos
"Is this footnote necessary"...
Fri Dec 12 13:29:12 2024
200.152.34.1

Sometimes I do not understand why some footnotes can´t be merged in the text itself... In my manuscript for a book "ohe day hope to see published" I do not used footnotes. All available information is in the text, even confliting ones from various sources. I only placed in the text a numbered system to identify from which source the info cames. It looks like: Data on this flight has confused informatiom from various sources, it took xxx hours and xxx kilometers[1], yyy hours and yyy kilometers [15] or zzz hours and zzz kilometers [25]. Then the reader can see from where I got the info. Some books has so many footnotes that I confess to read all text and ignore them...
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  #10  
Old 01-04-2004, 01:23 PM
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From TOCH!:

Antonio M
Footnotes
Sat Dec 13 08:55:14 2024
80.182.106.21

Sergio,
what you are talking about are exactly footnotes, used
to identify the sources of your information.

I agree that discussion about diffrent souces can be better
be included in the text itself.

Sometimes you want to put some additional information
about a unit, an event, or something other, in which
not all readers would be interested, and that would
harm the readability of the text. Maybe this information
might better be located in a footnote.

Antonio
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  #11  
Old 01-04-2004, 01:24 PM
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From TOCH!:

Antonio M
Footnotes
Sat Dec 13 08:55:14 2024
80.182.106.21

Sergio,
what you are talking about are exactly footnotes, used
to identify the sources of your information.

I agree that discussion about diffrent souces can be better
be included in the text itself.

Sometimes you want to put some additional information
about a unit, an event, or something other, in which
not all readers would be interested, and that would
harm the readability of the text. Maybe this information
might better be located in a footnote.

Antonio
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  #12  
Old 01-04-2004, 01:24 PM
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Sergio Luis dos Santos
Not footnote - Reference guide
Sat Dec 13 11:11:36 2024
200.97.140.96

Read carefully. I place all information on the text and gives the source from where it was taken. You can read all the text and whether be interested to research by himself or see where I got it, just check the reference listing. That´s very different from stoping the reading, read a short or sometimes long footnote then returning to the text.
In my manuscript you can read all information at once.
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  #13  
Old 01-04-2004, 01:25 PM
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From TOCH!:

John Vasco
Footnotes: an alternative view
Fri Dec 12 14:41:37 2024
195.92.67.68

The books that I have written, or co-written, do not have a single footnote. The reason for this is that if further information needs to be known by the reader, it is there with them at that moment of reading, not at the bottom of the page/end of chapter/end of book. So, in 'Bombsights', I may state what pilots like Aretz and Beudel were doing on particular days in the body of the text, with their Flugbuch entries as a separate entity in an appendix. Saves the reader from flicking back and forth all the time. That kind of thing has always bloody annoyed me! Also, quoting a tiny piece from another work in a proper context is not breach of copyright, so there is no harm in doing so.

I now expect to be completely taken apart on this one!!!


John Vasco
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  #14  
Old 01-04-2004, 01:25 PM
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From TOCH!:

Jukka Juutinen
Notes
Fri Dec 12 17:26:20 2024
213.28.164.216

So your approach would be similar to that employed by Thomas Jentz in his books on German tanks. It works for him. Don´t know about you since my budget has not permitted buying your books yet!
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  #15  
Old 01-04-2004, 01:26 PM
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From TOCH!:

John Vasco
Re: Notes
Fri Dec 12 19:03:45 2024
195.92.67.75

I haven't seen any of Thomas Jentz's books,as my interest does not extend to tanks. If he works without using footnotes, then yes, my approach is identical to him.

Don't worry about not knowing me, my work is run-of-the-mill stuff.
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  #16  
Old 01-04-2004, 01:26 PM
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RD
Run-of-the-mill stuff...
Sat Dec 13 13:55:47 2024
219.215.180.18

Don't believe that. John Vasco's books are much better and a good contribution to Luftwaffe better knowledge. The Schiffer books are somewhat pricey but I got the "Zerstörer" 1995 JAC Publications at bargain price. You can always start fron there...
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  #17  
Old 01-04-2004, 01:27 PM
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From TOCH!:

John Vasco
Re: Run-of-the-mill stuff...
Sat Dec 13 20:21:16 2024
195.92.67.70

They are run-of-the-mill stuff, in the sense that they are facts and photographs that are simply regurgitated for public consumption. They are not analytical critiques, nor a reasoned intellectual treatise on the subjects I have covered. What I have done, anyone could also have done. I did not 'discover' anything; everything was already there. That's the simple truth. I'm not fishing for compliments, simply stating how it is.

The above applies to my own works only. I do not include 'Zerstörer' in the above statement, since that was a joint effort with Peter Cornwell, and I would not presume to comment on any joint issue on his behalf.

I will not comment on the pricing policy of Schiffer, as that would be unprofessional to do so.


John Vasco
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  #18  
Old 01-04-2004, 01:28 PM
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From TOCH!:

Jukka Juutinen
sources
Fri Dec 12 17:31:22 2024
213.28.164.216

BTW, one thing I hate most is when some authors use the style of "...according to some sources blaa blaa, but another source blah blah..." without revealing the source. This really steals the reader the possibility of estimating the reliability of a particular source.

Jukka
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  #19  
Old 01-04-2004, 01:28 PM
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From TOCH!:

Hawk-Eye
Footnotes are necessary
Sat Dec 13 11:18:20 2024
195.93.65.9

They, or their equivalent, are necessary in genuinely historical works (just have a look at a few of them, for example "LUFTWAFFE - Strategy for Defeat 1933-1945", by Williamson Murray, a highly historical work) because most authors mention the same previously published books, articles or archive documents again and again. The readers would get fed-up very quickly of reading the same authors' names and the same titles again and again, up to several hundred times (?). So in this respect too it's better to give this information in a footnote or, more often still in historical works, in the form of a number corresponding a certain source or document which is given in all detail at the end of the chapter or of the book.

I find it very boring and tiring myself to look for the right number at the end all the time, often without discovering anything really new to the reader, but please note that a few sources are quoted very often so it's easy to remember their number or to make a short list yourself, and you can use some piece of paper to mark the page(s) at the end, too, which makes the use of these numbers much easier.
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  #20  
Old 01-04-2004, 01:29 PM
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From TOCH!:

Richard T. Eger
Footnotes & source notes
Sat Dec 13 13:49:19 2024
162.33.246.11

Dear fellow Luftwaffe researchers,

I am absolutely delighted with the tenor of this discussion. There is virtually no discussion of not using some form of sourcing identification, but rather, where this should be placed. The need for sourcing is assumed to be a given by most, if not all, the participants of this discussion.

When an author gives a source, he provides a way to check his statements and also potentially leads for others interested in researching the subject. A claim by Norman Malayney in his ATI/Watson's Whizzers series in the AAHS Journal (1995/1-3) in that 2 Me 262's arrived in the U.S. aboard victory ships prior to the big shipment aboard the HMS Reaper is supported with a reference note stating that the information came from AFHRA reels A5719 & A5720. The names of the victory ships are in question, so all I would need to do to check this out is to review these reels.

Misinterpretation of a source is always a possibility and a knowledgeable researcher, being able to review the original document, may then be able to determine the original intent of the document. Without this, the reader is left to either accept or reject the author's claims, but then it is a flip of the coin. The reader is left with a dilemma: "Should I believe what the author is telling me?" If the author won't show you his cards, you may decide to be distrustful. On the other hand, the author may appear to be quite reasonable in his other statements so, by inference, you simply accept his erroneous interpretation as correct.

There is also the rotten apple problem. If an author makes claims, especially claims that appear to be suspect, and does not support them with good documentation, these suspicious portions simply spread their rot to the rest of the book, making the whole work questionable, when perhaps the rest is quite correct. For instance, a recent work on ATI described German weapon systems completely inaccurately, this being apparent to any thinking reader regardless of previous knowledge of the subject, which tainted the rest of the work's history of ATI, bringing statements which might have been correct into question.

I very much appreciate an author noting with a superscript number where from a specific passage's claim is supported. The argument as to where to place the reference is probably a matter of personal choice of the author. Where possible, it would be nice to have a specific page in the source referenced, but this might make the printing costs quite high. While having a bibliographic reference in the back not connected directly to text in the book is better than nothing, it is a very poor second to knowing the source of specific claims within the text. Those superscript numbers in the text are priceless.

Whether to put all the information, itself, within the text really depends on what is being said. The author must ask himself: "Does the inclusion of this information here have greater benefit than the disruption it causes to the flow of thinking I am trying to maintain?" If you are just citing your source, it certainly shouldn't be buried in the text. Even if you have conflicting sources and want to be very honest about what you are dealing with, it is probably best to say in the text that there is some conflict, then direct the reader to a footnote somewhere that covers this. Breaking the continuity of thought in the text can be quite disruptive. As in any presentation, you have to keep your audience in mind.

Regards,
Richard
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