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學(xué)術(shù)論文寫作手冊(第8版)(修訂本)
定 價:88 元
- 作者:安東尼·溫克勒,喬·瑞·麥斯雷爾 著
- 出版時間:2025/8/1
- ISBN:9787301366172
- 出 版 社:北京大學(xué)出版社
- 中圖法分類:H319.36
- 頁碼:
- 紙張:膠版紙
- 版次:
- 開本:16開

《學(xué)術(shù)論文寫作手冊(第8版)(修訂本)》為英文原版影印,系統(tǒng)介紹了寫作研究論文的基本要求、格式規(guī)范和方法技巧,有助于學(xué)習(xí)者在大學(xué)直至工作的整個過程中學(xué)習(xí)掌握堅(jiān)實(shí)的學(xué)術(shù)論文寫作技巧,分主題、分階段介紹學(xué)術(shù)論文寫作技巧,提供最核心的信息,并采用大量實(shí)例分析,直接有效地幫助學(xué)習(xí)者。 全書系統(tǒng)整合國際學(xué)術(shù)寫作規(guī)范,針對非英語母語學(xué)者的學(xué)術(shù)英語表達(dá)難點(diǎn),設(shè)置專門的語言優(yōu)化模塊,具有較強(qiáng)的實(shí)踐指導(dǎo)意義。同時,作者在學(xué)術(shù)規(guī)范講解中融入跨文化溝通視角,分析不同學(xué)術(shù)體系下的寫作差異,是一本極具參考價值的學(xué)術(shù)論文寫作指導(dǎo)書籍。
本書系統(tǒng)闡述學(xué)術(shù)論文全流程寫作規(guī)范與技巧,覆蓋論文題目選擇、文獻(xiàn)綜述、研究方法設(shè)計(jì)、論文結(jié)構(gòu)搭建、學(xué)術(shù)語言運(yùn)用等核心環(huán)節(jié)。全書共分12章,從學(xué)術(shù)寫作基礎(chǔ)概念切入,逐步深入高級寫作策略,涵蓋定量與定性研究論文寫作差異分析、學(xué)術(shù)倫理規(guī)范等內(nèi)容。書稿輔以圖表、案例及寫作練習(xí),結(jié)構(gòu)清晰,兼具教學(xué)實(shí)用性與學(xué)術(shù)指導(dǎo)性。
安東尼·溫克勒(Anthony C. Winkler),美國加利福尼亞州立大學(xué)教授,主要從事大學(xué)英語詞匯、修辭、語法、寫作等方面的研究。同時,他也是一位文學(xué)作家,曾出版小說 The Lunatic, Coming Home to Teach等。 喬·瑞·麥斯雷爾(Jo Ray Metherell), 美國格倫代爾社區(qū)學(xué)院( Glendale Community College)教師,長期從事英語語法、寫作等課程教學(xué),與安東尼·溫克勒合作出版了近15部英語寫作及修辭類圖書。
Preface XVii
1 Basic Information about the Research Paper 1a Hatred of the research paper 3 1b De?nition of the research paper 3 1c Format of the research paper 4 1d Reasons for the research paper 5 1e The report paper and the thesis paper 5 1f Drafts of the research paper 6 1g Writing the research paper: Steps and schedule 9
2 Choosing a Topic 2a How to choose a topic 13 2b Topics to avoid 15 2b-1 Topics that are too big 15 2b-2 Topics based on a single source 15 2b-3 Topics that are too technical 15 2b-4 Topics that are trivial 16 2b-5 Topics that are too hot 16 2c Narrowing the topic 17
3 The Library 3a Layout of the library 21 3a-1 The computer 21 3a-2 Online full-text databases 23 3a-3 Microform indexes 24 3a-4 Stacks 24 3a-5 Reserve room or shelf 25 3a-6 Main desk 25 3a-7 Reserve desk 25 3a-8 Audiovisual room 25 3a-9 Microform room 26 3a-10 Newspaper racks 26 3a-11 Computer room 27 3a-12 Carrels 27 3b Organization of the library collections 27 3b-1 The Dewey Decimal System 28 3b-2 The Cutter-Sanborn Author Marks 29 3b-3 The Library of Congress Classi?cation System 30 3b-4 Classi?cation of periodicals 31 3b-5 Classi?cation of nonbooks 33 4 Using the Computer in Your Research 4a Computers and the research paper 37 4b The Internet 38 4b-1 The World Wide Web 38 4c Online resources 38 4c-1 Databases 39 4c-2 Electronic journals 39 4c-3 Online public-access catalogs (OPACs) 39 4c-4 Blogs and social networks 40 4d Researching with search engines 41 4d-1 Finding a search engine 42 4e Usenet, Listserv, telnet, and gopher 42 4f Evaluating Internet sources 43 4f-1 Where was the information found? 43 4f-2 Who wrote it? 44 4f-3 Who publishes it? 44 4f-4 What are the writers sources? 44 4f-5 What tone does the writer use? 45 4f-6 What do the writers contemporaries have to say? 45 4f-7 What is the writers motive? 45 4f-8 What is the context of the writers opinion? 45 4g Running a search 46 4h Useful Internet sites 47 5 Doing the Research 5a What information to look for 51 5a-1 Single-fact information 51 5a-2 General information 51 5a-3 In-depth information 52 5b Where to look for information 52 5b-1 General indexes 53 5b-2 Specialized indexes 54 5b-3 Using interviews and surveys 57 5b-4 Corresponding by e-mail 57 5b-5 Attending lectures, concerts, or art exhibits 58 5c Assembling a working bibliography 58 5d Selecting your sources: Skimming 60 5d-1 Primary and secondary sources 61 5d-2 Evaluating sources 61 5e Note-taking 63 5e-1 Using the computer to take notes 64 5e-2 Using a copy machine to take notes 65 5e-3 Kinds of notes 65 a. The summary 65 b. The paraphrase 66 c. The quotation 66 d. The personal comment 68 5f Plagiarism and how to avoid it 69 6 The Thesis and the Outline 6a The thesis: De?nition and function 75 6a-1 Formulating the thesis 76 6a-2 Rules for wording the thesis 77 6a-3 Placing the thesis 79 6a-4 Choosing a title 80 6b The outline 81 6b-1 Visual conventions of the outline 81 6b-2 Equal ranking in outline entries 82 6b-3 Parallelism in outline entries 82 6b-4 Types of outlines 83 a. The topic outline 83 b. The sentence outline 84 c. The paragraph outline 85 d. Decimal outline notation 86 6c Choosing an outline form 87 7 Transforming the Notes into a Rough Draft 7a Preparing to write the rough draft: A checklist 91 7b Writers block 91 7c Writing with a computer 91 7c-1 Overdoing it 92 7c-2 Using a spell-checker 92 7d Using your notes in the paper 92 7d-1 Summaries and paraphrases 92 7d-2 Direct and indirect quotations 93 7d-3 Using brief direct quotations 94 7d-4 Using long quotations 95 7d-5 Using quotations from poetry 97 7d-6 Using a quotation within another quotation 98 7d-7 Punctuating quotations 98 7d-8 Handling interpolations in quoted material 99 7d-9 Using the ellipsis 997d-10 Overusing quotations 102 7d-11 Personal commentary 103 7e How to use quotations to explore and discover 104 7f Writing with unity, coherence, and emphasis 105 7f-1 Unity 105 7f-2 Coherence 106 7f-3 Emphasis 108 7g Using the proper tense 108 7h Using graphics in your research paper 109 7i Writing the abstract 115
8 Revising Your Rough Draft 8a Principles of revision 119 8a-1 Rereading your writing 119 8a-2 Revising the paper from biggest to smallest elements 119 8b Revising the opening paragraph 120 8b-1 Revising the introduction 121 a. Use a quotation 121 b. Ask a question 121 c. Present an illustration 122 8b-2 Check that your paragraphs follow the sequence of topics in the thesis 122 8b-3 Revising the body paragraphs 123 8b-4 Check paragraph transitions 124 8c Revising sentences for variety and style 125 8c-1 Revise sentences to use the active voice 126 8c-2 Revise to use an appropriate point of view 128 8c-3 Revise sexist language 129 8d Revising words: Diction 130 8d-1 Revise diction for accuracy and exactness 131 8d-2 Revise the overuse of phrases for subjects instead of single nouns 132 8d-3 Revise redundant expressions 133 8d-4 Revise meaningless words and phrases 133 8d-5 Revise snobbish diction 134 8e Rules for Writers. Not. 134 9 The MLA System of Documentation 9a Parenthetical documentation: Author-work (MLA) 139 9a-1 What to document 140 9a-2 Guidelines for in-text citations 140 9b Format for Works Cited (MLA) 144 9b-1 General order in references to books 145 a. Author 146 b. Title 147 c. Name of editor, compiler, or translator 147 d. Edition (other than ?rst) 147 e. Series name and number 147 f. Volume number 148 g. Publication facts 148 h. Page numbers 149 i. Medium of publication 149 9b-2 Sample references to books 149 a. Book by a single author 149 b. Book by two or more authors 149 c. Book by a corporate author 149 d. Book by an anonymous or pseudonymous author 150 e. Work in several volumes or parts 150 f. Work within a collection of pieces, all by the same author 150 g. Collections: Anthologies, casebooks, and readers 151 h. Double referencea quotation within a cited work 151 i. Reference works 151 j. Work in a series 151 k. Reprint 152 l. Edition 152 m. Edited work 152 n. Book published in a foreign country 152 o. Introduction, preface, foreword, or afterword 153 p. Translation 153 q. Book of illustrations 153 r. Foreign title 153 9b-3 General order in references to periodicals 153 a. Author 153 b. Title of the article 154 c. Publication information 154 d. Pages 155 e. Medium of publication 1559b-4 Sample references to periodicals 155 a. Anonymous author 155 b. Single author 155 c. More than one author 155 d. Journal with continuous or separate pagination 156 e. Monthly magazine 156 f. Weekly magazine 156 g. Newspaper 157 h. Editorial 157 i. Letter to the editor 157 j. Critical review 157 k. Published interview 157 l. Published address or lecture 158 9b-5 References to electronic sources 158 9b-6 General order in references to electronic sources 158 9b-7 Sample references to electronic sources 159 a. Abstract online or on CD-ROM 160 b. CD-ROM 160 c. Computer program 160 d. Corporate website 160 e. E-mail 160 f. FTP source 160 g. Gopher 160 h. Government website 161 i. Electronic mailing list 161 j. MOOs and MUDs (synchronous communication) 161 k. Online book 161 l. Online database 161 m. Online dictionary 161 n. Online encyclopedia 162 o. Online magazine articleauthor listed 162 p. Online magazine articleno author listed 162 q. Telnet 162 r. Usenet 162 s. Websiteauthor listed 162 t. Websiteno author listed 162 9b-8 Sample references to nonprint materials 162 a. Address or lecture 162 b. Artwork 163 c. Film, videotape, or DVD 163 d. Interview 164 e. Musical composition 164 f. Radio or television program 165 g. Sound recording (compact disc or tape) 165 h. Performance 166 9b-9 Sample references to special items 167 a. Artwork, published 167 b. The Bible and other sacred writings 167 c. Classical works in general 167 d. Dissertation 168 e. Footnote or endnote citation 168 f. Manuscript or typescript 168 g. Pamphlet or brochure 169 h. Personal letter 169 i. Plays 169 j. Poems 170 k. Public documents 171 l. Quotation used as a source 172 m. Report 173 n. Table, graph, chart, map, or other illustration 173 9c Content notes 174 9c-1 Content note explaining a term 175 9c-2 Content note expanding on an idea 175 9c-3 Content note referring the reader to another source 175 9c-4 Content note explaining procedures 175 9c-5 Content note acknowledging help 176 9c-6 Content note consolidating references 176 9d Finished form of the MLA paper 176 9d-1 Appearance 176 9d-2 Title page 176 9d-3 Abstract 177 9d-4 Pagination and headings 177 9d-5 Spacing of text 178 9d-6 Font 178 9d-7 Illustrations, tables, and other graphics 178 a. Tables 179 b. Other illustrative materials 180 9d-8 Use of numbers 183 9d-9 Bibliography (titled Works Cited) 183 9e Peer review checklist 184 9f Submitting your paper electronically 184 10 The APA System of Documentation 10a Parenthetical documentation: Author-date (APA) 187 10a-1 Examples of APA in-text citations to books 188 a. One work by a single author 188 b. Subsequent references 188c. One work by two authors 188 d. One work by three to ?ve authors 189 e. Work by six or more authors 189 f. Corporate author 190 g. Works by an anonymous author or no author 191 h. Authors with the same surname 191 i. Two or more works in the same parentheses 191 j. References to speci?c parts of a source 192 k. Personal communications 192 l. Citation as part of a parenthetical comment 193 10a-2 Avoiding clutter in the text 193 10b Format for References (APA) 193 10b-1 General order for books in References 194 10b-2 Sample references to books 195 a. Book by a single author 195 b. Book by two or more authors 195 c. Edited book 195 d. Translated book 196 e. Book in a foreign language 196 f. Revised edition of a book 196 g. Book by a corporate author 196 h. Multivolume book 197 i. Unpublished manuscript 197 10b-3 General order for periodicals in References 197 10b-4 Sample references to periodicals 198 a. Journal article, one author 198 b. Journal article, up to six authors 198 c. Journal article, paginated anew in each issue 198 d. Journal with continuous pagination throughout the annual volume 199 e. Magazine article, magazine issued monthly 199 f. Magazine article, magazine issued on a speci?c day 199 g. Newspaper article 199 h. Editorial 200 i Letter to the editor 200 j. Review 200 10b-5 Sample references to electronic sources 200 a. Abstract online 201 b. CD-ROM 201 c. Computer program 202 d. Corporate website 202 e. E-mail 202 f. FTP source 202 g. Gopher 202 h. Government website 202 i. Electronic mailing list (Listserv) 203 j. MOOs and MUDs (synchronous communication) 203k. Online book 203 l. Online database 203 m. Online dictionary 203 n. Online encyclopedia 203 o. Online magazine articleauthor listed 204 p. Online magazine articleno author listed 204 q. Telnet 204 r. Usenet 204 s. Websiteauthor listed 205 t. Websiteno author listed 205 u. Message posted to a group 205 10b-6 Sample references to nonprint materials 205 a. Motion picture 205 b. Audio recording (cassette, record, tape, compact disc) 206 10b-7 Sample references to special items 206 a. Government documents 206 b. Legal references 207 c. A report 208 10c Writing the abstract 208 10d Finished form of the paper 209 10d-1 Two kinds of APA papers: The theoretical and the empirical 209 10d-2 Appearance of the ?nal copy 210 a. Outline 210 b. Title page 210 c. Abstract 211 d. Text 212 e. Content notes and endnotes 212 f. Illustrations: Tables and ?gures 212 g. Use of numbers 214 h. Using the right tense 214 i Bibliography (titled References) 217 10e Peer review checklist 218 10f Submitting your paper electronically 218 11 The Traditional System of Documentation (CMS) 11a Footnotes and endnotes 221 11a-1 Formatting of notes 221 11a-2 Rules for numbering the notes 22311a-3 Sample footnote references to books 224 a. Single author 225 b. More than one author 225 c. Work in several volumes or parts 225 d. Collections: Anthologies, casebooks, and readers 226 e. Double referencea quotation within a cited work 226 f. Edition 226 g. Translation 227 11a-4 Sample footnotes for periodicals 227 a. Anonymous author 227 b. Single author 227 c. More than one author 227 d. Journal with continuous pagination in the annual volume 227 e. Journal with separate pagination for each issue 228 f. Monthly magazine 228 g. Weekly magazine 228 h. Newspaper 228 i. Editorial 229 j. Letter to the editor 229 11b Subsequent references in footnotes and endnotes 229 11c Electronic sources 230 11d Finished form of the paper 231 11d-1 Abstract 232 11d-2 Pagination and text format 232 11d-3 Content or reference notes 232 11d-4 Illustrations: Tables and ?gures 233 a. Tables 233 b. Other illustrative materials 233 11d-5 Use of numbers 234 11d-6 Bibliography 235 11e Peer review checklist 235 11f Submitting your paper electronically 236 12 Sample Student Papers 12a Paper using author-work documentation (MLA) 239 12b Paper using author-date documentation (APA) 251 12c Paper using footnote documentation (CMS) 265APPENDICES A Mechanics A1 Numbers and dates 271 A1-a Percentages and amounts of money 271 A1-b Inclusive numbers 272 A1-c Roman numerals 272 A1-d Dates 272 A2 Titles 273 A2-a Titles in italic 273 A2-b Titles in quotation marks 275 A2-c Titles within titles 277 A2-d Frequent references to a title 277 A3 Italic and underlining 277 A4 Names of people 278 A5 Hyphenating words 279 A6 Spaces and punctuation marks 280 A7 Foreign-language words 280 A8 Abbreviations 281 A8-a Commonly used abbreviations 281 A8-b The Bible 285 A8-c Shakespeare 287 A8-d Days and months 287 A8-e States and U.S. territories 288 A8-f Publishers names 288 A8-g Abbreviations 291 A9 Spelling 291 B General and Specialized References, an Annotated List B1 A list of general references 293 B1-a Sources that list books 293 B1-b Sources that list periodicals and newspapers 294 B1-c Sources about general knowledge 297B1-d Encyclopedias 297 B1-e Sources about words: Dictionaries 297 B1-f Works about places 299 B1-g Works about people 299 B1-h Resources about government publications 302 B1-i Sources about nonbooks (nonprint materials) 303 B2 A list of specialized references 306 B2-a Art 306 B2-b Business and economics 308 B2-c Dance 310 B2-d Ecology 311 B2-e Education 311 B2-f Ethnic studies 312 B2-g High technology 314 B2-h History 315 B2-i Literature 317 B2-j Music 320 B2-k Mythology, classics, and folklore 322 B2-l Philosophy 323 B2-m Psychology 324 B2-n Religion 325 B2-o Science 326 B2-p Social sciences 327 B2-q Womens studies 327 Credits 329 Index 333
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