Making Sense of MLA Format Citation: Edited By: Kimberly D. Long Created By: Krista Hoeksema/Writing Center
Making Sense of MLA Format Citation: Edited By: Kimberly D. Long Created By: Krista Hoeksema/Writing Center
Making Sense of MLA Format Citation: Edited By: Kimberly D. Long Created By: Krista Hoeksema/Writing Center
What is plagiarism?
Using any information that is not common knowledge from any source and not giving proper credit through citation. You must cite ideas or words that are not your own or
1. Direct quotations
2. Paraphrases
Lets play a game to see how well you know how to quote and paraphrase NOTE: The following examples on paraphrasing are
based on ideas from Doing Honest Work in College by Charles Lipson.
Jane Doe spent most of her life as a recluse in her home, but she occasionally ventured out to parties where she let her hair down and danced on tables. (from a book by Lola Boltjes)
Jane Doe spent
most of her life as a recluse. (no citation) Is this the proper way to cite?
No. Though the entire line is not used, it is the authors idea and an exact quote. It needs to be enclosed in
Jane Doe spent most of her life as a recluse in her home, but she occasionally ventured out to parties where she let her hair down and danced on tables. (from a book by Lola Boltjes) Jane Doe spent No. This does cite most of her life as a the source, but the recluse in her exact words are home, but she used, and they are occasionally not enclosed in ventured out to quotation marks. parties where she let her hair down
Jane Doe spent most of her life as a recluse in her home, but she occasionally ventured out to parties where she let her hair down and danced on tables. (from a book by Lola Boltjes)
Jane Doe passed
most of her life away as a hermit, but she sometimes went out to parties and boogied down on tables (Boltjes
No. While the words are not exactly the authors, they are very similar, and the sentence format is basically the
Enough games Lets get to the facts about quotations and paraphrases and how to cite them.
1. Direct
quotes
If more than 20 percent of your paper is quotes, which is someones exact words, then thats too much! You want your paper to contain your writing. Too many quotes in a paper take away from the writers voice.
Proper citation for a direct quote in your paper is as follows: Example: Jane Doe spent most of her life as a recluse in her home, but she occasionally ventured out to parties where she let her hair down and danced on tables (Boltjes 259) .
Authors Last Name Page number
Another way to cite a direct quote is to use a signal phrase to mention the author in the paper
Signal phrase Author
According to Boltjes, Doe spent most of her life as a recluse in her home, but she occasionally ventured out to parties where she let her hair down and danced on tables (259). Page number
*NOTE: When the author is mentioned, you do not need to include the last name within the parentheses at the end of the quote. The page number is enough.
What do you do when you dont have a page number-such as with an internet source-to cite in parentheses?
You may then use either the paragraph number (Lewis par. 5) or section name (Brooks Introduction) in place of page numbers.
For direct quotes that are longer than four lines, you will want to set the quote off from the rest of your paper with a block quote.
At the end of The Tell-Tale Heart, the narrators calm facade steadily disintegrates:
The officers were satisfied. My MANNER had convinced them. I was singularly at ease. They sat and while I answered cheerily, they chatted of familiar things. But, ere long, I felt myself getting pale and wished them gone. My head ached, and I fancied a ringing in my ears; but still they sat, and still chatted. The ringing became more distinct: I talked more freely to get rid of the feeling: but it continued and gained definitiveness -- until, at length, I found that the noise was NOT within my ears. (Poe 247)
1 margin punctuation author Page number(s)
2. Paraphrases
Paraphrasing is another way of handling quotations. When paraphrasing, the writer relays the meaning in her own words.
An example of paraphrasing
Original quote:
Jane Doe spent most of her life as a recluse in her home, but she occasionally ventured out to parties where she let her hair down and danced on tables (Boltjes 259).
Paraphrase:
Although Jane Doe didnt leave the house much, she did like to party every once in awhile (Boltjes 259).
While it conveys the meaning of the quote, it is not too close to the authors original words, and it is cited correctly.
When paraphrasing
Read the passage and make sure you understand its meaning 2) Think about how the passage relates to your paper 3) Turn the paper over and write the main idea in your own words. 4) Reread the quote making sure that you have not kept the same structure nor merely changed a few words
1)
A list of all sources that are referenced in your essay. It contains all the information that your reader needs to locate the sources cited in your essay.
them-on a new page of your paper Double space Alphabetize all of your citations, even if your listing starts with a title Start each new citation at the left margin; indent 5 spaces or a half inch for each subsequent line of an entry
One more thing to remember Many students get frustrated when doing a Works Cited page if they cant find a piece of information such as the author or other publication information (particularly with internet sources).
In that case
The following slides will show examples of Works Cited entries based on the MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers.
the first entry. In the rest of the entries by that author, three hyphens will replace the authors name.
Example: King, Stephen. Dolores Claiborne. New York: Viking, 1993. ---. The Shining. New York: Doubleday, 1977.
Works Cited
Gibaldi, Joseph. MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers. 6th ed. New York: Modern Language Association Of America, 2003. Lipson, Charles. Doing Honest Work in College. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 2004.
While MLA citation can be hard work, hopefully it all makes more sense now.