
|
GUIDELINES
In the planning stage of the project, the editors studied the
features of various subjects that were to be widely represented in the New
Handbook and prepared guidelines for authors. These listed salient features
that should, if possible, appear in every article of a given genre--the
spouse's name or the subject's death date in a biography, for instance, or the
date of founding in a community history. The genres varied widely, from county
and community histories to organizations and institutions to newspapers and
miscellaneous historical events. The reader who explores the New
Handbook will soon know what the guidelines required in most article types. If guideline information does not appear in an article, that fact means that it was unavailable, not that it was not sought. The guidelines in general required, for instance, that books, plays, movies, paintings, and other works be dated by year in the text. But occasionally it is impossible to discover when a book was published or when a painting was done. Despite the best efforts of authors and staff members, the birth or death date or parents' names of a biographical subject sometimes eluded the editors' grasp, and an unmentioned omission resulted.
top of page | about | search | browse | help | home - contribute - bookstore - credits - news
report an error or correction | suggest an article topic
|