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English 100 - Professor Robinson - FALL 2024: MLA

Why Cite Sources?

 

         Cite Your Sources

Whenever you quote or base your ideas on another person's work, you must document the source you used. Even when you do not quote directly from another work, if reading that source contributed to the ideas presented in your paper, you must give the authors proper credit.

Citations allow readers to:

  • locate and further explore the sources you consulted
  • show the depth and scope of your research
  • give credit to authors for their ideas

Citations provide:

  • evidence for your arguments
  • add credibility to your work by demonstrating that you have sought out and considered a variety of resources

In written academic work, citing sources is standard practice and shows that you are responding to this person, agreeing with that person, and adding something of your own. Think of documenting your sources as providing a trail for your reader to follow to see the research you performed and discover what led you to your original contribution.

Check this link for information on "Accidental Plagiarism."

MLA 8 Citation Examples

BOOKS

A Book with One Author

Basic format:

Author’s Last name, First name. Title of the Book. Publisher, Date of publication.

Example:

Buffington, Jack. The Recycling Myth: Disruptive Innovation to Improve the Environment. Praeger,

     2016.       


A Book with Two or More Authors

Note: For two authors, only reverse the first author’s name; for three or more authors, follow the first author with a comma and et al.

Basic format: 

Author's Last name, First name, and Second Author’s First name Last name Title of the Book.

     Publisher, Date of publication.

Example 1:

Jesse, Neal G., and Kristen P. Williams. Ethnic Conflict: A Systematic Approach to Cases of Conflict.

     CQ Press, 2011.

Example 2:

Moseley, William G., et al. An Introduction to Human-Environment Geography. Wiley Blackwell, 2014.


An Electronic Book from a Cerritos College Library Database

Note: Only include full URL if professor requires. Do not include http.

Basic format:

Author’s Last name, First name. Title of the Book. Publisher, Date of publication.

     Name of Database, DOI or stable URL if provided.

Example:

Hayes, Kevin J. Road to Monticello: The Life and Mind of Thomas Jefferson. Oxford UP, 2008.  

eBook Collection EBSCOhost.


An Electronic Book from the Web

Basic format:

Author’s Last name, First name.  Title of the BookTitle of the website.  Publisher, Date of publication,

     Web address. (do not include http)

Example:

Shakespeare, William. Macbeth. Project Gutenberg. Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation,        

     1998, www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/1524.


An Article in a Familiar Reference Book

Basic format:

Author’s Last name, First name. “Title of Article.” Title of Reference Book. Edition. Date of

     Publication, Page number(s).

Example:

Hong, Maria. “Guatemalan Americans.” Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America. 5th ed.

     2000, pp. 153-68.


An Article in a Less Familiar Reference Book

Basic format:

Author’s Last name, First name. “Title of Article.” Title of Reference Book, edited by Editor’s name(s),

     Volume number, Publisher, Date of publication, Page number(s).

Example:

La Patourel, John. “Normans and Normandy.” Dictionary of the Middle Ages, edited by Joseph R.

     Strayer, vol. 13, Scribner’s, 1987, pp. 250-88.


An Article in an Anthology

Basic format:

Author’s Last name, First name. "Title of Essay." Title of Collection, edited by Editor's Name(s),

     Publisher, Date of publication, Page number(s).

Example:

Gaines, Ernest J. “The Sky Is Gray.” The Oxford Book of the American South: Testimony,

     Memory, and Fiction, edited by Edward L. Ayers and Bradley C. Mittendorf, Oxford

     University Press, 1997, pp. 492-516. 



PERIODICALS

A Print Scholarly Journal Article

Basic format:

Author’s Last name, First name. “Title of Article.” Journal Title, Volume Number, Issue

     Number, Date of publication, Page number(s).

Example:

Craner, Paul M. “New Tool for an Ancient Art: The Computer and Music.” Computers and

     the Humanities, vol. 25, no. 5, 1991, pp. 303-13.


A Scholarly Journal Article from a Database

Note: Only include full URL if professor requires. Do not include http.

Basic format:

Author’s Last name, First name.  “Title of Article.”  Journal Title, Volume number, Issue number,

Date of publication, Page number(s). Name of Database, DOI or stable URL if provided.

Example 1:

Goldman, Anne. “Questions of Transport: Reading Primo Levi Reading Dante.” The Georgia Review,

     vol. 64, no. 1, Spring 2010, pp. 69-88. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/41403188.

Example 2:

Arnold, Wilfred Niels. “The Illness of Vincent van Gogh.” Journal of the History of the Neurosciences,

vol. 13, no. 1, Mar 2004, pp 22-43.  Academic Search Premier.


A Print Magazine Article

Basic format:

Author’s Last name, First name. “Title of Article.” Magazine Title, Volume number, Issue number, Day

     Month Year, Page Number(s).

Example 1:

McKibben, Bill. “Global Warming’s Terrifying New Chemistry.” Nation, vol. 302, no. 15/16, 11/18 Apr.

     2016, pp. 12-18.

Example 2:

Luscombe, Belinda. “How to Stay Married.”  Time, 13 June 2015, pp. 36-41.


A Magazine Article from a Database

Note: Only include full URL if professor requires. Do not include http.

Basic Format:

Author’s Last name, First name. “Title of Article.” Name of Magazine, Volume number, Issue

     number, Date of publication, Page number(s). Name of Database, DOI or stable URL if provided.

Example:

Horowitz, Alexandra. “My Dog Is Smarter Than Your Dog.” Discover, vol. 29, no. 7, July 2008, pp. 71-73.

     MasterFile Premier.


An Article from an Online Periodical (not from a database)

Basic format:

Author’s Last name, First name. “Article name.” Title of Web Magazine, Publisher, Volume number, 

     Issue number, Date of Publication, Page number(s) if provided, Web address.

Example:

Bianchi, Stephanie. “Peerless Pathways to Find Peer Reviews.” Info Today, vol. 33, no. 4, Jul.-Aug.

     2009, www.infotoday.com/online/jul09/Bianchi.shtml.



OTHER ONLINE RESOURCES

A Web Site or Page

Basic format:

Author’s Last name, First name “Title.” Name of Site, Name of institution/organization affiliated with

     the site (sponsor or publisher), Date of resource creation if available, Web address.

Example:

Harris, Charles “Teenie.” Teenie Harris Archive, Carnegie Museum of Art,

    www.teenie.cmoa.org/interactive/index.html#date08.


A YouTube Video 

Basic format:

Lastname, Firstname [or single username]. "Title of YouTube Video." Publishing Website, Day month

     year posted, Web address.

Example:

McGonigal, Jane. “Gaming and Productivity.” YouTube, 3 July 2012,

     www.youtube.com/watch?v=mkdzy9bWW3E.

 

For detailed information on documenting your research using the Modern Language Association (MLA) style, please stop at the Library Reference Desk and ask for the MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers 8th ed.)

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