Europhilism and American Art in the Gilded Age. K. Korn and B. Lowry. bibl. Brush p.11-51, Nov '03 The Arts and Crafts movement as a Gilded Age phen- omenon. J Soc Art suppl. v.9(1): p.27-40, Spr '03 The impact of Gilded Age aesthetes on Boston crafts. M. Hess. bibl. Ars Desig p.17-22, Mar/Apr '03 Charity and social prominence in 1880s Philadelphia. R. Salvatierra. bibl. tbl. Am Soc Past Pres p.61-98, Aug 11 '03 Acquisitive fetishism in Gilded Age portraiture. M. Seay. bibl. ill. tbl. J Soc Art v.9(2-3): p.3-14, Fall '03 No longer common men: affectations of nobility as seen in the diary of Gilded Age entrepreneur Robert English. M. Posalski. J Hist Am p.193-200, Apr '03 |
Greenwich West's gilded gem.
TANY
p.10 Apr 28 '03 Reconstructed Gilded Age mansions from the architec- tural plans of Waggeman & Babin Associates. P. Acosta and K. Crittendon. col. ill. Am J Arch Hist suppl. v.30(2): p.17-37, Summ '03 Wharton subtext in hypertext: "Age of Innocence" scho- larship on the Web. J New York Stud v.10: p.4, May/Jun '03 Magnificent and kitsch: the Gilded Age palace of the Hartlee family of Houston. M. Moyer. col ill. Arch Tex v.17: p.20-25, Oct '03 Labor unrest, social anxiety and the languid death of a utopian vision: reappraising Edward Bellamy's "Looking Backward." D. Rinde. bibl. Messages v.32(6): p.415- 452, Jun '03 |
Europhilism and American Art in the Gilded Age. and . bibl. Brush p.11-51, Nov '03 The Arts and Crafts movement as a Gilded Age phen- omenon. S. Attala. J Soc Art suppl. v.9(1): p.27-40, Spr '03 The impact of Gilded Age aesthetes on Boston crafts. M. Hess. bibl. Ars Desig p.17-22, Mar/Apr '03 Charity and social prominence in 1880s Philadelphia. R. Salvatierra. bibl. tbl. Am Soc Past Pres p.61-98, Aug 11 '03 Acquisitive fetishism in Gilded Age portraiture. M. Seay. bibl. ill. tbl. J Soc Art v.9(2-3): p.3-14, Fall '03 No longer common men: affectations of nobility as seen in the diary of Gilded Age entrepreneur Robert English. M. Posalski. J Hist Am p.193-200, Apr '03 |
Greenwich West's gilded gem.
TANY
p.10 Apr 28 '03 Reconstructed Gilded Age mansions from the architec- tural plans of Waggeman & Babin Associates. P. Acosta and K. Crittendon. col. ill. Am J Arch Hist suppl. v.30(2): p.17-37, Summ '03 Wharton subtext in hypertext: "Age of Innocence" scho- larship on the Web. J New York Stud v.10: p.4, May/Jun '03 Magnificent and kitsch: the Gilded Age palace of the Hartlee family of Houston. M. Moyer. col ill. Arch Tex v.17: p.20-25, Oct '03 Labor unrest, social anxiety and the languid death of a utopian vision: reappraising Edward Bellamy's "Looking Backward." D. Rinde. bibl. Messages v.32(6): p.415- 452, Jun '03 |
Europhilism and American Art in the Gilded Age. K. Korn and B. Lowry. bibl. Brush p.11-51, Nov '03 The Arts and Crafts movement as a Gilded Age phen- omenon. S. Attala. J Soc Art suppl. v.9(1): p.27-40, Spr '03 The impact of Gilded Age aesthetes on Boston crafts. M. Hess. bibl. Ars Desig p.17-22, Mar/Apr '03 Charity and social prominence in 1880s Philadelphia. R. Salvatierra. bibl. tbl. Am Soc Past Pres p.61-98, Aug 11 '03 Acquisitive fetishism in Gilded Age portraiture. M. Seay. bibl. ill. tbl. J Soc Art v.9(2-3): p.3-14, Fall '03 No longer common men: affectations of nobility as seen in the diary of Gilded Age entrepreneur Robert English. M. Posalski. J Hist Am p.193-200, Apr '03 |
Greenwich West's gilded gem.
TANY
p.10 Apr 28 '03 Reconstructed Gilded Age mansions from the architec- tural plans of Waggeman & Babin Associates. P. Acosta and K. Crittendon. col. ill. Am J Arch Hist suppl. v.30(2): p.17-37, Summ '03 Wharton subtext in hypertext: "Age of Innocence" scho- larship on the Web. J New York Stud v.10: p.4, May/Jun '03 Magnificent and kitsch: the Gilded Age palace of the Hartlee family of Houston. M. Moyer. col ill. Arch Tex v.17: p.20-25, Oct '03 Labor unrest, social anxiety and the languid death of a utopian vision: reappraising Edward Bellamy's "Looking Backward." D. Rinde. bibl. Messages v.32(6): p.415- 452, Jun '03 |
Europhilism and American Art in the Gilded Age. K. Korn and B. Lowry. bibl. Brush p.11-51, Nov '03 The Arts and Crafts movement as a Gilded Age phen- omenon. S. Attala. J Soc Art suppl. v.9(1): p.27-40, Spr '03 The impact of Gilded Age aesthetes on Boston crafts. M. Hess. bibl. Ars Desig p.17-22, Mar/Apr '03 Charity and social prominence in 1880s Philadelphia. R. Salvatierra. bibl. tbl. Am Soc Past Pres p.61-98, Aug 11 '03 Acquisitive fetishism in Gilded Age portraiture. M. Seay. bibl. ill. tbl. J Soc Art v.9(2-3): p.3-14, Fall '03 No longer common men: affectations of nobility as seen in the diary of Gilded Age entrepreneur Robert English. M. Posalski. J Hist Am p.193-200, Apr '03 |
Greenwich West's gilded gem.
TANY
p.10 Apr 28 '03 Reconstructed Gilded Age mansions from the architec- tural plans of Waggeman & Babin Associates. P. Acosta and K. Crittendon. col. ill. Am J Arch Hist suppl. v.30(2): p.17-37, Summ '03 Wharton subtext in hypertext: "Age of Innocence" scho- larship on the Web. J New York Stud v.10: p.4, May/Jun '03 Magnificent and kitsch: the Gilded Age palace of the Hartlee family of Houston. M. Moyer. col ill. Arch Tex v.17: p.20-25, Oct '03 Labor unrest, social anxiety and the languid death of a utopian vision: reappraising Edward Bellamy's "Looking Backward." D. Rinde. bibl. Messages v.32(6): p.415- 452, Jun '03 |
Europhilism and American Art in the Gilded Age. K. Korn and B. Lowry. bibl. Brush p.11-51, Nov '03 The Arts and Crafts movement as a Gilded Age phen- omenon. S. Attala. J Soc Art suppl. v.9(1): p.27-40, Spr '03 The impact of Gilded Age aesthetes on Boston crafts. M. Hess. bibl. Ars Desig p.17-22, Mar/Apr '03 Charity and social prominence in 1880s Philadelphia. R. Salvatierra. bibl. tbl. Am Soc Past Pres p.61-98, Aug 11 '03 Acquisitive fetishism in Gilded Age portraiture. M. Seay. bibl. ill. tbl. J Soc Art v.9(2-3): p.3-14, Fall '03 No longer common men: affectations of nobility as seen in the diary of Gilded Age entrepreneur Robert English. M. Posalski. J Hist Am p.193-200, Apr '03 |
Greenwich West's gilded gem.
TANY
p.10 Apr 28 '03 Reconstructed Gilded Age mansions from the architec- tural plans of Waggeman & Babin Associates. P. Acosta and K. Crittendon. col. ill. Am J Arch Hist suppl. v.30(2): p.17-37, Summ '03 Wharton subtext in hypertext: "Age of Innocence" scho- larship on the Web. J New York Stud v.10: p.4, May/Jun '03 Magnificent and kitsch: the Gilded Age palace of the Hartlee family of Houston. M. Moyer. col ill. Arch Tex v.17: p.20-25, Oct '03 Labor unrest, social anxiety and the languid death of a utopian vision: reappraising Edward Bellamy's "Looking Backward." D. Rinde. bibl. Messages v.32(6): p.415- 452, Jun '03 |
The second citation contains just one author, whose name we have highlighted. |
While the first citation contains TWO authors. Depending on the field of study, an article may have been written by MANY authors, though normally citations don't list more than the first three. |
To reiterate: most citations WILL have at least one author though usually no more than three will be listed. Even so, don't be surprised to find a citation that references no author at all. Module 5 finished. to Menu. |