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CL ST 374: Sex, Gender, & Culture in the Ancient Mediterranean

This course guide is intended to support students taking the course, CL ST 374 as they complete papers and other research projects.

Citation chaining

If you've found one good source and you want to find more like it, try out citation chaining! Citation chaining is the process of tracking down items connected to a single paper by using citations to follow a line of research backward or forward in time. How does this work?

  1. Start with a book or article that you know is useful for your research and highly relevant to your topic. 
  2. Examine your source's references list. This contains sources that the original author used to inform their own work, and they may contain information that you can use as well!
  3. If you find another useful source, you can check its references list for additional citations to potentially useful sources! Doing this can be particularly useful when trying to find reports or primary sources that can help inform historical research.

This content was adapted from "LIB 160: Information Literacy" by the Iowa State University Library Instruction Services.

Chaining in the opposite direction

Normally, citation chaining is done by looking at the sources that your original source cited in their reference list, but this can work in the opposite direction as well! Using tools like Google Scholar, you can find articles or book chapters that have cited your starting article! Just look up your article, book, or book chapter in Google Scholar and click on the Cited by link under the item's information: 

The Google Scholar listing for a book on Gender and Body Language in Roman Art, with the words "cited by 14" circled beneath the book description.

After you click on this link, you will find a list of books, cook chapters, and articles that cited your original source, some of which you can access online:

Google Scholar cited by results: several books are listed all covering the topic of roman women or roman society.

Citation chaining like this can be incredibly useful if you want to find more recent research that has built upon the sources you already have, or if you want to see another side of a particular issue or event.

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Becca Yowler
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