American Psychological Association 7th edition

Michael, M. (ca. 2018). Stolen gods and stolen blessings? : The narrative significance of Rachel’s theft in the intertextual mapping of the Jacob cycle [Book]. Journal for Semitics, 27,2 (2018) 22 pp, ,2 (2018) 22 pp.

Chicago Manual of Style 17th edition (author-date)

Michael, Matthew. 2018. „Stolen gods and stolen blessings? : The narrative significance of Rachel’s theft in the intertextual mapping of the Jacob cycle“. Book. Journal for Semitics, Nr. 27,2 (2018) 22 pp: ,2 (2018) 22 pp.

Springer - Basic (author-date)

Michael M (2018) Stolen gods and stolen blessings? : The narrative significance of Rachel’s theft in the intertextual mapping of the Jacob cycle. Journal for Semitics ,2 (2018) 22 pp

Springer - Lecture Notes in Computer Science

1.Michael, M.: Stolen gods and stolen blessings? : The narrative significance of Rachel’s theft in the intertextual mapping of the Jacob cycle. Journal for Semitics. ,2 (2018) 22 pp (2018).

DIN 1505-2 (author-date, Deutsch) - standard superseded by ISO-690

Michael, Matthew: Stolen gods and stolen blessings? : The narrative significance of Rachel’s theft in the intertextual mapping of the Jacob cycle. In: Journal for Semitics (2018), Nr. 27,2 (2018) 22 pp, S. ,2 (2018) 22 pp

Achtung: Diese Zitate sind unter Umständen nicht zu 100% korrekt.