Article: If you're only citing a single contribution to an edited volume with multiple authors, rather than the volume itself, list the name of the author of that contribution as the author. Type the author's last name first, followed by their first and middle initials. Separate multiple authors with commas, putting an ampersand before the name of the final author.  Single-author example: "Smith, R." Multiple-author example: "Smith, R., Henderson, P. H., & Truman, I. G." The publication year is the date the book was published, even if the chapter or article you are citing was previously published somewhere else. Type a space after the period following the last author's initial, open parentheses, type the year, then close your parentheses and add another period. Example: "Smith, R. (1995)." Type a space and then include the title of the specific article or chapter you're citing. Use sentence-case, capitalizing only the first word and any proper nouns. Put a period at the end of the title. Example: "Smith, R. (1995). A new story dawns. The next part of your citation will be a bit like you were citing the book directly, and then copied that citation into your citation of the article or chapter. Start with the editor's name, then provide the title of the book in italics, using sentence-case. Do not place a period at the end of the book's title.  Example: "Smith, R. (1995). A new story dawns. Janeway, J. L. (Ed.) Dreaming of other worlds" For multiple editors, follow the same rules as you would with multiple authors. Immediately after the title of the book, type a space and then open parentheses. Use the abbreviation "pp." and type the range of pages where the chapter or article appears in the book.  Example: "Smith, R. (1995). A new story dawns. Janeway, J. L. (Ed.) Dreaming of other worlds (pp. 44-52)." If there are multiple editions, include the edition number in the same parentheses as the page numbers. For example: "Smith, R. (1995). A new story dawns. Janeway, J. L. (Ed.) Dreaming of other worlds (2nd ed., pp. 44-52)." If the book was published in the US, include the name of the city and postal abbreviation for the state, separated by a comma. For books published outside the US, include the name of the city and the name of the country, again separated by a comma. Follow the location with a colon, then type the name of the company that published the book. End your citation with a period. Example: "Smith, R. (1995). A new story dawns. Janeway, J. L. (Ed.) Dreaming of other worlds (pp. 44-52). New York: Independent Press."
What is a summary of what this article is about?
Start with the author of the article or chapter you're citing. List the year of publication in parentheses. Write the title of the chapter. Provide information about the book itself. Specify the pages where the chapter or article appears. Close with the location and name of the publisher.