MLA 7th Sullivan Library @ Dominican College Updated 11/30/2012 What is MLA?  MLA = Modern Language Association  Humanities, Language & Literature Manuals for:  research papers.

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Transcript MLA 7th Sullivan Library @ Dominican College Updated 11/30/2012 What is MLA?  MLA = Modern Language Association  Humanities, Language & Literature Manuals for:  research papers.

MLA 7th
Sullivan Library @
Dominican College
Updated 11/30/2012
What is MLA?
 MLA
= Modern Language Association
 Humanities, Language & Literature
Manuals for:
 research papers (on reserve at front desk)

High school and undergraduates
 scholarly

publication
Graduates, faculty, and researchers
What are the style rules?
 12
point Times New Roman font or other
similar type of font
 1” margins around all edges
 Double spaced throughout
 No title page – instead put your
information at the top of the first page
What do I need?
 Title
page (beginning of first page)
 Main body of paper (rest of first page and
beyond)
 List of References (end)
Title Page (from Purdue OWL)
Why cite?
 Gives
credit to the researchers
 Shows which sources contributed to your
learning and intellectual growth
 Allows readers to easily find the sources to
further their own knowledge
 Prevents accidental plagiarism by you
Did you know. . . ?
 That




it is plagiarism to:
Copy the words, ideas, graphs, images, etc.
of others without proper credit
Cut and paste various ideas together from
different sources without proper credit
Use the same paper in more than one class
without permission
Edit material between quote marks without
proper notice (look in the MLA 7th manual
for instructions on how to do it properly)
What should I cite in my
paper?
 What
works you used
 What you took from each source


Quotations
Paraphrases of sentences or ideas
 Where

in the work you found the material
Page numbers
Citing what you found
(body of paper)
 Author

/ Page system:
… character of the protagonist” (Tennyson
998).
 In-text
citations
are a roadmap to
your works cited page
Ways to cite properly
 Two
places to put Author info (page info
goes at the end in parentheses):
In the starting signal phrase:
The research by Davis supported … (13).

In parentheses at the end:
… habitual use of opium during the writing”
(Davis 13).

In-text citing
1 author
Signal phrase: Williams said “Dreams are a
reality” (13).
In the parentheses: …reality”(Williams 13).
2 authors
Signal phrase: Williams and Robinson
remarked “Dreams are a reality” (13).
In the parentheses: …reality” (Williams and
Robinson 13).
In-text citing
3 authors
Signal phrase: Williams, Robinson, and Smith
said “Dreams are a reality” (13).
In the parentheses: …reality” (Williams,
Robinson, and Smith 13).
4+ authors – must match works cited page. List
them all, *OR* use et al.
Signal phrase: Williams et al. said “Dreams are a
reality” (13).
In the parentheses: …reality” (Williams et al. 13).
Paraphrasing vs. Quoting
 Two

ways to insert an idea into your paper
Direct quotation
 Requires
author information
 requires a page number (when available)

Paraphrasing
 Requires
author information
 requires a page number (when available)
Direct Quotation Example
 Author
in signal phrase

Agar writes “everyone uses the word language
and everybody these days talks about culture. . . .
‘Languaculture’ is a reminder, I hope, of the
necessary connection between its two parts” (60).

Author / page # in parentheses
… and furthermore, “ ‘languaculture’ is a
reminder . . . of the necessary connection
between its two parts” (Agar 60).
What is paraphrasing?
 More
than changing the word order of a
few words
 More than just summarizing


Synthesizing (putting together) the
information
Expressing what you have learned to the
reader
Paraphrasing Example
 Using
a signal phrase for author to begin the
sentence has the advantage of letting your
reader know in advance that it is not your
idea(s), but parenthetical citations are okay,
too.
 Snippet from an original source:
Some of Dickinson’s most powerful poems
express her firmly held conviction that life
cannot be fully comprehended without an
understanding of death.

- Wendy Martin, Columbia Literary History of the United States, pg. 625
Paraphrasing Example
 Plagiarism:
Emily Dickinson firmly believed that we cannot
fully comprehend life unless we also understand
death. (ideas taken from the original quote)
 Proper
citation:
As Wendy Martin has suggested, Emily Dickinson
firmly believed that we cannot begin to
understand life unless we also understand
death (625).
Unique phrases
in paraphrases
 If
you want to use a unique or exact phrase
from the original text within your paraphrase:

Wendy Martin states that Dickinson held fast to
the belief that “life cannot be fully
comprehended” without a person also taking
the time to reflect on what death means to
them (625).
Paraphrasing Tips
 Re-read
the text until you grasp its meaning
 Physically cover the text up!
 Re-write the quote from memory
 Look over your work:



Any unique phrases you would not normally use
need to be put in quotes (with a page number!)
Try to use different words than the author did
If it is close to the original idea, try again or ask for
help
Works Cited Formatting
 Located
at the end of your paper, on a
new page
 Every source in the paper has an entry
 One word at the top of the page,
centered:
Works Cited
[Not bolded, italicized, or in quote marks]
Works Cited Formatting
 Entries
in alphabetical order by (the first)
author’s last name usually, or, if needed,
the title of the work
 Double spaced
 Hanging indents used for references of 2+
lines
 Cite the work of individuals whose ideas,
research, or theories have influenced your
paper
 Citing an item implies you have read it
MLA Author info (all items)
 Reverse

the first author’s name.
Smith, Jane
 For
works with multiple authors, only the first
author’s name is reversed.

Smith, Jane, Corey Jefferson, and Bob Pluck.
 For
four or more authors, write out the names
in full OR use et al.

Smith, Jane, et al.
 Do
not abbreviate names unless you only
have the abbreviation, not the full name
Works Cited - Books
Last Name, First Name Middle Name. An Italicized Title
with All Significant Words Capitalized: An MLA Example.
City of Publisher: Publisher Name, year. Medium of
publication.
Smith, David Will. Running Home: An American Sprinter’s
Story. Columbus: Ohio State UP, 2004. Print.
Jones, Beth and Keith Jair, eds. Geriatric Physical
Therapy Within the Hospital. Philadelphia: F.A. Davis,
2009. Print.
Works Cited - Articles
Last Name, First Name Middle Name. An Article Title
Not Italicized: With All Significant Words Capitalized.
Name of Journal Italicized, volume#.issue# (year):
page#-page#. Print.
For articles found in databases:
Last Name, First Name Middle Name. An Article Title
Not Italicized: With All Significant Words Capitalized.
Name of Journal Italicized, volume#.issue# (year):
page#-page#. Database name italicized. Web.
Date of access.
Article Examples
Sanchez, Raul. Outside the Text: Retheorizing
Empiricism and Identity. College English,
74.3 (2012): 234-246. Print.
Correll, Michael, Mary Whitmore, and Matthew
Gleicher. Exploring Collections of Tagged
Text for Literary Scholarship. Computer
Graphics Forum, 30.3 (2011): 731-741.
Academic Search Elite. Web. 5 Feb. 2012.
Works Cited: Magazines
McEvoy, Dermot. “Little Books, Big Success.”
Publisher’s Weekly 30 Oct. 2006: 26-28.
Print.
Tyre, Peg. “Standardized tests in college?”
Newsweek, Newsweek, 16 Nov. 2007.
Web. 7 Feb 2012.
The second magazine article is treated like
a website since it is found online.
Works Cited - Websites

Generally includes the following information:







Name of the author, editor, etc., when
available
Title of the website
Title of overall website (if distinct from work title)
Publisher or sponsor. If unavailable: n.p.
Date of publication. If unavailable: n.d.
Medium of Publication (Web)
Date of access (day, month, year)
Works Cited - Websites
Last Name, First Name Middle Name. A Website title with
All Significant Words Capitalized. Overall website
name. Publisher, Publication date. Web. Access date.
Committee on Scholarly Editions. “Guidelines for Editors
of Scholarly Editions.” Modern Language
Association, Modern Language Assn., 29 June 2011.
Web. 7 Feb 2012.
Works Cited - Websites
If the URL is required, state as shown:
Eaves, Morris, Robert Essick, and Joseph Viscomi, eds.
“The William Blake Archive.” Lib. of Cong., 8 May 2008.
Web. 15 May 2008. <http://wwww.blakearchive.org/
blake/>
Note that the name of the title of the page and the title of the overall website were
the same, so the archive name does not need to be mentioned twice. You skip
instead to the publisher information (Lib. Of Cong.).
More help with MLA
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=22CPQoLE4U0
(MLA 7th)
 Title: MLA Style Essay Format – Word Tutorial
 Username: peakdavid
 Occupation: University Professor, Media and
Communications
 MLA

Sample Paper: OWL @ Purdue
http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource
/747/13/