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Learn about the MLA citation style, its importance, and how to use it effectively. Explore different citation methods like quotation, paraphrasing, and summarizing. Master the MLA conventions and citing online sources.
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The Wonderful World of Citations! MLA Edition ENGL 1301
MLA Style • MLA = Modern Language Association • Used mostly by those in the humanities (e.g., English, history, foreign languages, etc.) • Newest version of format was released in 2010 (cautiously use reference sources that predate the update)
Why do we cite? • To give credit to those who wrote the material you are using/avoiding plagiarism • To establish your ethos (citation shows that you know how to operate in an academic setting, and that you “play by the rules”) • Make work traceable • To show you aren’t the only one who holds your position (strength in numbers)
How to use other’s material Quotation • The exact words used by another • Uses quotation marks and a parenthetical citation to show that the work is not your own • In-text
How to use other’s material Paraphrasing • An idea given entirely in your own words and sentence structure • Uses a parenthetical citation to show that the work is not your own • In-text
How to use other’s materials Summary • A condensed version of the main points in a paragraph or article given in your own words • Uses a parenthetical citation to show that the work is not your own
When to quote a source • The language of the original is striking • You will be analyzing the exact text of the original • The original was written or spoken by someone likely to be significant to your audience
Integrating other’s material • Introduce the work you will be using (orient the reader to the source) and the point you’re trying to support or make • Present the material (italicized and bolded in the following example to highlight the integration; do not italicize or bold integrated sources in your actual essays) • Explain the significance or meaning to the reader about how the material supports your claim or thesis
MLA Conventions • In-text citations: Last name of author and page number, no punctuation (Bauer 10) • Bibliographic page: Works Cited • Use italics to show book, movie, magazine, newspaper, music album, etc., titles • Double space entire essay, including bibliographic information • Header on each page in upper right-hand corner; last name no punctuation: Heilig1
MLA Citation: Online Sources • On Works Cited page, cite as Author’s Last Name, First Name. “Title of Page.” Title of Site.Sponsor, Date posted or last updated. Medium. Day Month Year of access. • In essay, cite only author’s name or title of work; no page numbers for Web pages; include paragraph number if offered in text • Do not include hyperlink address for either the in-text citation or the Works Cited
MLA Example • On Works Cited page, cite as: Britt, Robert Roy. “Pluto Now Called a Plutoid.” Space.com.TechMediaNetwork.com, 11 June 2008. Web. 13 September 2012. • In essay, cite as (Britt) • If no author is named, consider the agency, company, or endorsing entity the author (e.g., the USEPA, Best Buy, United Way) • If citing entire Web site, skip page title
MLA Example The quotes that he chooses from the aforementioned Prince of Prescriptivists John Simon, lends a similar (hyperbolic) attitude: “no damsel was ever in such distress, no drayhorse more flogged, no defenseless child more drunkenly abused than the English Language today” (MacNeil 307).
BA 5 + 1.1: How to Cite • Cite the article as a chapter in the First-Year Writing Textbook Example: MacNeil, Robert. “Do You Speak American?” First-year Writing: Writing in the Disciplines. 3rd Custom ed. New York: Pearson Custom. 2010. Print.
Resources: MLA Citation • St. Martin’s Handbook: pgs. 233-237 • St. Martin’s Handbook: pgs. 402-451 • EasyBib: http://easybib.com