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Eng 101

MLA
In-text (parenthetical) citations

What is MLA?

Modern Language Association (1883)

Style most commonly used to write papers and cite sources within
liberal arts and humanities

Foundation for other styles such as APA


Not

every source type has a formula in APA; therefore, must


refer to MLA knowledge

Specifies guidelines for formatting manuscripts and using the


English language in writing

MLA Basics

Use Times New Roman size 12 font, double space throughout, flush left,
paperclip left corner (I have a cat problem, please staple)

In header, Last name and page number in upper right corner beginning with
page 1

Flush left, your name, instructors name, class, date (military styledate
month year)

Center title (do not bold, underline, or italicize. Do apply standard rules of
capitalization)

Indent each paragraph

https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/747/01/

Why use MLA?

Builds writers credibility by demonstrating accountability to source material

Provides writers with a system for referencing sources (uniformity)

Protects writers from accusations of plagiarism

All of the following are considered plagiarism:

turning in someone else's work as your own

copying words or ideas from someone else without giving credit

failing to put a quotation in quotation marks

giving incorrect information about the source of a quotation

changing words but copying the sentence structure of a source without giving credit (patchwriting)

copying so many words or ideas from a source that it makes up the majority of your work, whether
you give credit or not

http://www.checkforplagiarism.net/plagiarism-consequences

Avoiding Plagiarism
Any summary, paraphrase, or quotation used in a paper MUST be
documented
Exemptions include the following:

Common knowledge

Disney theme parks attract thousands of visitors annually

Your own conclusions

Facts found in many sources

Shakespeares death

Standard terms

Mouse, CD-ROM, download

If ever unsure, document source

57-4 Avoiding Plagiarism


1. The sheer number of occasions on which people cry
in The Wizard of Oz is astounding.

Plagiarized.
Why?
The student uses language borrowed from the original
source without quotation marks and without
crediting the author. The following is an acceptable
revision:

Rushdie points out that the sheer number of occasions


on which people cry in The Wizard of Oz is
astounding (223).

57-4 Avoiding Plagiarism


2. Rushdie notes that so many characters cry in The
Wizard of Oz that its surprising the Wicked Witch did
not get wet and melt away earlier in the film (22324).

Ok.
Why?
The student has paraphrased without using language or
structure from the source. The student also cites the
authors name and gives the page numbers for the
source in parentheses.

57-4 Avoiding Plagiarism


3. Rushdie points out the number of characters who weep in The
Wizard of Oz: Dorothy cries tears of frustration before being
allowed to enter the Wizards palace, the guard at the palace
becomes sodden with tears, the Cowardly Lion cries when
Dorothy hits him on the nose, the Tin Man nearly rusts up
again from crying, and Dorothy cries again when captured by
the Witch (223).
Plagiarized.
Why?

The student has borrowed words from the source without


putting them in quotation marks (tears of frustration, sodden
with tears, rusts up again) and has plugged in synonyms for
other language from the source (cries/bawls, hits/bops).

57-4 Avoiding Plagiarism


4. Pointing out how many times characters cry in The
Wizard of Oz, Rushdie observes that if the hydrophobic
Witch could only have been closer at hand on one of these
occasions the movie might have been much shorter (22324).
Ok.
Why?
The student has correctly placed borrowed language in
quotation marks and given the authors name and the
page numbers on which the quotation can be found.

57-4 Avoiding Plagiarism


5. Rushdie notes that Dorothys weeping makes other
characters cry, as when her tears undam a quite alarming
reservoir of liquid from the guard in an extreme
performance outside the Wizards palace (223).

Plagiarized.
Why?
The student has used the words extreme performance from
the source without putting them in quotation marks.

Integrating Sources Avoid freestanding quotations

Freestanding quotation

Riena Gross is a chief psychiatric social worker at Illinois Medical Center in


Chicago. Kids have no real sense that they belong anywhere or to anyone
as they did ten or fifteen years ago. Parents have loosened the reins, and
kids are kind of floundering (Gross 74).

Integrate quote into sentence to create flow

Addressing a seminar at the University of Toronto, Dr. Joseph Pomeranz


speculated that acupuncture may work by activating a neural pain
suppression mechanism in the brain (324).

The report further stated, All great writing styles have their wellsprings in
the personality of the writer. As Buffon said, The style is the man (Duncan
49).

Integrating Sources

Attributive tag signal the author before the information

Ellen Goodman offers this further observation about writers who peddle
formulas for achieving success through selfishness: They are all Doctor
Feelgoods, offering placebo prescriptions instead of strong medicine. They
give us a way to life with ourselves, perhaps, but not a way to live with each
other (16).

Or use a regular in-text parenthetical

The author offers this further observation about writers who peddle
formulas for achieving success through selfishness: They are all Doctor
Feelgoods, offering placebo prescriptions instead of strong medicine. They
give us a way to life with ourselves, perhaps, but not a way to live with each
other (Goodman 16).

What techniques can be used to


incorporate sources into your
sentences?

Quote only part of sentence or paragraph


needed.
Love

alters not with his brief hours and


weeks, but bears it out even to the edge of
doom.

What techniques can be used to


incorporate sources into your
sentences?

Avoid freestanding quotations

Use attributive tags

Shakespeare insists that Love alters not with his brief hours and weeks, but
bears it out even to the edge of doom.

Love alters not with his brief hours and weeks, Shakespeare insists, but
bears it out even to the edge of doom.

Shakespeare insists that true lovers are persistent: Love alters not with his
brief hours and weeks, but bears it out even to the edge of doom.

What techniques can be used to


incorporate sources into your
sentences?

Incorporate the quotation into the flow of


your own sentence
In

Sonnet 116, true lovers [bear] it out


even to the edge of doom.

Integrating Sources

Block quotations

quotations 4 lines or more must be double indented

Have a complete sentence before the quote

Do not use quotation marks

Barbara Tuchmans Proud Tower presents a somewhat different view of the


new conservative leaders:
Besides riches, rank broad acres, and ancient lineage, the new
government also possessed, to the regret of the liberal opposition,
and in the words of one of them, an almost embarrassing wealth and
talent and capacity. Secure in authority, resting comfortably on
their electoral majority in the House of Commons and on a
permanent majority in the House of Lords, of whom four-fifths were
conservatives, they were in a position, admitted the same opponent,
of unassailable strength. (4).

58-3 Integrating sources


1.Malcolm Gladwell points out that drivers feel safer in an
SUV than in a sports car because they think that the SUV
drivers chances of surviving a collision with a
hypothetical tractor-trailer in the other lane are greater
(31).
Ok.
Explanation:
The student has put quotation marks around the exact
words from the source and has handled the MLA citation
correctly, putting the name of the author in a signal
phrase and the page number in parentheses.

58-3 Integrating sources


2. Gladwell argues that active safety is every bit as important
as a vehicles ability to withstand a collision (31).
The sentence is unacceptable.
Explanation:
The phrase active safety is enclosed in quotation marks in the
source; single quotation marks are required for a quotation
within a quotation. In addition, the student has failed to use
an ellipsis mark to indicate that the word which is omitted
from the quotation. The following is an acceptable revision:

Gladwell argues that active safetyis every bit as important


as a vehicles ability to withstand a collision (31).

58-3 Integrating sources


3. A majority of drivers can, indeed, be wrong. Most of us
think that S.U.V.s are much safer than sports cars
(Gladwell 31).
This passage is unacceptable.
Explanation:

The second sentence is a dropped quotation. Quotations


should be introduced with a signal phrase, usually naming
the author. The following is an acceptable revision:
A majority of drivers can, indeed, be wrong. As Malcolm
Gladwell points out, Most of us think that S.U.V.s are
much safer than sports cars (31).

58-3 Integrating sources


4. According to Gladwell, American SUVs are more likely to
be involved in collisions than other vehicles because
[they] cant get out of the way in time (31).
Ok.
Explanation:

The student has introduced the quotation with a signal


phrase and used brackets to indicate the change from you
to they fit the grammar of the sentence.

58-3 Integrating sources


5. Gladwell explains that most people expect an SUV to
survive a collision with a hypothetical tractor-trailer in the
other lane (31).
This sentence is unacceptable.
Explanation:

The student has changed the wording of the source (of


surviving) to fit the grammar of the sentence (to survive)
but has not indicated the change with brackets. The
following is an acceptable revision:
Gladwell explains that most people expect an SUV [to
survive] a collision with a hypothetical tractor-trailer in
the other lane (31).

MLA in-text citations (regular & attributive tag)

The student is quoting from page 187 of the following essay:

Perez-Torres, Rafael. Between Presence and Absence: Beloved,


Postmodernism, and Blackness. Tony Morrisons Beloved: A Casebook. Ed
William L. Andrews and Nellie Y. McKay. New York: Oxford UP, 1999. 179201. Print.
What would the in-text citation (parenthetical) look like for this quote?
Amy describes the scars on Sethes back as a tree, which, as suggested by
Rafael Perez-Torres, transforms the signs of slaveryinto an image of fruition
instead of oppression (187).

In-text citations (parentheticals) must include the authors last name or first
word of title and the page number

(Stanko 7)

59-1 In-text citations

1.
A. Richard A. Hawley reports that although the
ancient Chinese used marijuana for medical
purposes, there is no record of the Chinese
using it as a pleasure-producing drug (26).
Explanation:
In MLA style, the sentence period comes after
the parenthetical citation.

59-1 In-text citations


2.
B. Drugs classified as Schedule I by the Drug
Enforcement Administration are illegal, even for
medical purposes, but they are allowed in
authorized experiments (Henninfield and Ator 63).

Explanation:
When a work has two or three authors, all authors
must be named either in a signal phrase or in the
parenthetical citation.

59-1 In-text citations


3.
B. Nearly half of 1,035 oncologists surveyed in 1991
said that if smokable marijuana were legal for cancer
patients, they would prescribe it (Cross-Eyed 89).
Explanation:

When the author of an article is unknown, a short form


of the title is given in the parenthetical citation.

59-1 In-text citations


4.
A. Marshall explains that marijuana can be dangerous for
people with heart conditions because its use can
dramatically increase heart rate and blood pressure
(Legalization 79).

Explanation:
A short form of the title of the work appears in the
parenthetical citation because two works by Marshall are
given in the works cited list.

59-1 In-text citations


5.

B. The US Drug Enforcement Administration has allowed


marijuana to be used in experiments with patients suffering
from glaucoma. According to one expert, Several studies
since 1971 have shown that smoking marijuana causes the
pressure within the eye to decrease and to remain at a
lowered level for about five hours (Marshall, Legalization
67).
Explanation:
The authors name is not given in the signal phrase (According
to one expert)so it appears in the parenthetical citation
along with a short form of the title of the work and the page
number on which the quotation may be found.

59-1 In-text citations


6.

A. The Drug Enforcement Administration of the US Department


of Justice reports that marijuana use among young people
aged twelve to seventeen in the United States nearly
doubled in the 1990s from 4.3% to 8.3%.
Explanation:

For an unpaginated online source, a signal phrase giving the


author of the source is sufficient. The abbreviation n.
pag.is not necessary.

59-1 In-text citations


7.

A. According to a report by the United States Justice


Departments Drug Enforcement Administration, marijuana in
the 1990s was about five times more potent than the
marijuana of the 1960s.
Explanation:

The signal phrase gives the complete name of the author of the
source, in this case a government agency. If the student uses
a parenthetical citation, it must include the complete name
under which the work is given in the list of works cited:
(United States, Dept. of Justice, Drug Enforcement
Administration).

59-1 In-text citations


8.

A. I consider this [alleviating acute pain and nausea] a need


that has to be filled, says Rabbi Isaac P. Fried of New York of
his administration of marijuana to suffering patients. Should
I buckle under the fear of an archaic law that doesnt deal
with the present needs of the 1990s? (qtd. In Treaster 38).
Explanation:
When a source is quoted in another source, MLA style requires
the abbreviation qtd. in (for quoted in).

59-1 In-text citations


9.

B. Brian Hecht sums up the debate over the medical use of


marijuana in three questions: (1) Is the drug safe? (2) does it
work? And (3) How does it compare with other available
drugs? (8).
Explanation:

Because the question mark is in the original source, it appears


inside the quotation mark and before the parenthetical
citation. A period follows the parentheses.

59-1 In-text citations


10.

A. Fiona A. Campbell et al. present the results of scientific studies


on the effectiveness and safety of using marijuana for medical
purposes.
Explanation:
In MLA style for a work with more than three authors, the in-text
citation matches the entry in the list of works cited. In this
cate, et al. appears after the first authors name.
Alternatively, the student could use all the authors names in
the works cited list and the in-text citation.

What is a Works Cited page?

Alphabetical list of sources found at the end of a research-based essay

Entries are listed alphabetically by authors or editors last name or by the title
of the work if no author/editor is available

Author names are written last name, first name, middle name (or initials)
Burke,

Levy,

Kenneth

David M.

Wallace,

DO NOT list titles (Dr., Sir, Saint, etc.) or degrees (PhD, MA, DDS, etc.)
John

Smith, PhD appears as Smith, John

DO include suffixes (Jr., II., etc.)


Dr.

David Foster

Martin Luther King, Jr. appears as King, Martin Luther, Jr.

https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/747/12/

Works Cited page basics

One-inch margins, same header as rest of essay, double spaced (no extra
spaces between citations)

Works Cited (do not italicize, underline, bold, or put inside quotation marks)
centered at top of page

First line of each entry is NOT indented. The second and subsequent lines are
indented (hanging indent).

Page numbers are hyphenated, not separated by a dash

URLs for Web entries are required for online sources

Use a DOI if available

Works Cited page basics

Use italics (do not underline) titles of larger works (books, magazines, etc).

Commas are used instead of periods between Publisher, Publication Date,


and Pagination.

Medium is no longer necessary.

Containers are now a part of the MLA process, in light of technology. Periods
should be used between Containers.

DOIs should be used instead of URLS when available.

Use the phrase, Accessed on instead of listing the date or the


abbreviation, n.d.

Works Cited page basics

It there is more than one entry per author, works are arranged alphabetically
by title

For second and all additional entries, type three hyphens and a period in
place of the authors name

Stanko, Jeannine. I Like Belly Dancing. Pittsburgh: Random, 2014. Print.

---. I Like Cats. Pittsburgh: Random, 2014. Print.

Citing a Book
Jacobs, Alan. The Pleasures of Reading in an Age of
Distraction. Oxford UP, 2011.
In

this version, only the most essential information is


included (authors name, book title, publisher, and date).
Note that the city of publication is not needed, and the
medium of publication is eliminated.

Citing an Article from a Scholarly Journal


Kincaid, Jamaica. In History. Callaloo, vol. 24, no. 2, Spring
2001, pp. 620-26.

This version identifies the volume (24), the number (2), and the
page numbers (620-26) of the scholarly journal, rather than
leaving those numbers without clear explanation. This helps
readers best make sense of your citation and allows them to
locate your source without getting bogged down with extra
information or references that can be difficult to decipher. Also
note that punctuation is simple; only commas separate the journal
title, volume, number, date, and page numbers.

Citing an Article from an Anthology


Last name, First name. "Title of Essay." Title of Collection, edited
by Editor's Name(s), Publisher, Year, Page range of entry.

Example

Harris, Muriel. "Talk to Me: Engaging Reluctant Writers." A Tutor's


Guide: Helping Writers One to One, edited by Ben Rafoth,
Heinemann, 2000, pp. 24-34.

How to create a Works Cited page

First, adhere to all of the basics as outlined in the previous slides

Third, find the appropriate formula to document the necessary information


of the source

OWL@Purdue https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/747/05/

Core elements

Author. Title of source. Title of container, Other contributors, Version,

Number, Publisher, Publication date, Location.

How to create a Works Cited page

Online Bib Generators - WARNING

Not always correct

Inaccurate information

Not up-to-date with current MLA

User error

MAKE SURE YOU DOUBLE CHECK YOUR WORK FOR ERRORS

Electronic Sources

Author and/or editor names (if available)

Article name in quotation marks.

Title of the website, project, or book in italics.

Any version numbers available, including editions (ed.), revisions, posting dates,
volumes (vol.), or issue numbers (no.).

Publisher information, including the publisher name and publishing date.

Take note of any page numbers (p. or pp.) or paragraph numbers (par. or pars.).

Date you accessed the material (Date Accessed).

URL (without the https://) DOI or permalink.

Remember to cite containers after your regular citation. Examples of containers


are collections of short stories or poems, a television series, or even a website. A
container is anything that is a part of a larger body of works.

Use the following format:

Author. Title. Title of container (self contained if book), Other contributors


(translators or editors), Version (edition), Number (vol. and/or no.), Publisher,
Publication Date, Location (pages, paragraphs and/or URL, DOI or permalink).
2nd containers title, Other contributors, Version, Number, Publisher, Publication
date, Location, Date of Access (if applicable).

For Wednesday...
Read

Narration: Relating Events, read


chapter 8 (pgs. 143-160)

For Monday Complete Mock Works Cited page


(sources listed on next page)

Sources for mock works cited page.


Pretend that you are writing an essay that is 9 pages in length. Create a
complete MLA Works Cited Page using the following sources:

interview in person with Robert Akins, November 19, 2010

Website article by Dr. Joshua Smith entitled The Many Uses of Pencils.
It was published March 22, 2010 and viewed August 3, 2012. The URL
is www.articlesonline.smith/pencils.html

Pens vs. Pencils written by Henry Goldman and Elizabeth Howard.


Published by Gold House in Philadelphia in 1989.

The Beauty of Mechanical Pencils by Alexander Morrow, published by


Westing Forge in Denver, CO in 2011.

Short video called The Ink of Mystery, directed by Bernard Howard


and starring Kurt Sherman, distributed by Public Video in November
2009.

Encyclopedia of Style article, Writing Utensils, by John Gruber,


published in 2008, 5th edition

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