Chicago Notes-Bibliography citations, primary source analysis, cross-disciplinary source discovery, and thematic literature synthesis -- with full source provenance on every claim.
Chicago 17th edition (Notes-Bibliography) is the standard for humanities scholarship. CiteDash generates footnotes, endnotes, and bibliography entries automatically. Switch to MLA, Turabian, or any of 10,000+ CSL styles when needed.
Whether you are working with historical documents, literary texts, philosophical treatises, or religious manuscripts, CiteDash structures research around primary source engagement and secondary source contextualization.
Search across Semantic Scholar, OpenAlex, CrossRef, JSTOR-indexed journals, and web sources simultaneously. One query covers literature, history, philosophy, classics, and area studies.
The multi-agent AI pipeline reads sources, identifies theoretical frameworks and historiographical debates, and organizes findings thematically -- the kind of nuanced synthesis humanities journals expect.
Every claim traces back to its original source. Click any citation to see the search query that found it, how it was evaluated, and why it was included. Essential for transparent scholarship.
Quick Summary for a seminar response paper. Standard Research for a course essay. Deep Research for a thesis chapter. Literature Review for a comprehensive historiographical survey.
Literary criticism, close reading, comparative literature, genre studies
Historiography, archival research, primary source analysis, periodization
Analytic and continental traditions, ethics, epistemology, logic
Ancient Greek and Latin texts, classical reception, archaeology
Comparative religion, theology, sacred texts, ritual studies
Visual analysis, iconography, museum studies, material culture
Multi-database search across Semantic Scholar, OpenAlex, CrossRef, and web sources for relevant humanities scholarship.
AI agents assess source quality, identify theoretical frameworks and schools of thought, and score relevance to your research question.
Findings organized thematically with attention to historiographical debates, competing interpretations, and interdisciplinary connections.
Every claim cited in Chicago Notes-Bibliography by default. Full bibliography generated automatically. Export to Word, PDF, or Markdown.
Yes. Chicago 17th edition (Notes-Bibliography) is the default for humanities research, which is the standard for history, literature, philosophy, and most humanities disciplines. You can switch to MLA, Turabian, or any of 10,000+ CSL styles at any time.
CiteDash structures research around primary and secondary sources. While it cannot read handwritten manuscripts or access paywalled archives directly, it can search for published primary source collections, scholarly editions, and secondary analyses of primary materials across academic databases.
Yes. CiteDash searches across multiple databases simultaneously, covering literature, history, philosophy, religious studies, art history, and area studies. The AI synthesizes findings across disciplinary boundaries, which is especially valuable for interdisciplinary seminars and thesis projects.
Absolutely. Deep Research mode supports up to 500 sources (Max plan) with full source provenance. Literature Review mode generates structured historiographical surveys. Export to Word or PDF for direct thesis inclusion with properly formatted Chicago footnotes.
CiteDash excels at finding and synthesizing secondary scholarship about texts, authors, and historical periods. For close reading of specific passages, you can upload your primary texts to the Library and CiteDash will generate analysis notes that reference both your uploaded texts and academic sources.
100 free credits, no credit card required. Search academic databases, generate Chicago citations, and synthesize literature in minutes.