13. Quoting and Citing Literary Genres

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Transcript 13. Quoting and Citing Literary Genres

Quoting and Citing Literary Genres
Created April 2012
Information came from MLA Handbook for Writers of
Research Papers
MLA Style
 In MLA documentation style, place the author’s name
in the parenthetical citation if the author is not
mentioned in the sentence.
 The aesthetic and ideological orientation of jazz
underwent considerable scrutiny in the late 1950s and
early 1960s (Anderson 7).
MLA Style
 If the author is mentioned in the sentence, do not
include the author’s name in the parenthetical
citation.
 According to Anderson, the aesthetic and ideological
orientation of jazz underwent considerable scrutiny in
the late 1950s and early 1960s (7).
Quoting Prose with Question
Marks
 Place a question mark inside a closing quotation mark if a
question mark occurs there in the quoted passage.
 Peeta asks, “Where is Haymitch, anyway? Isn’t he supposed to
protect us from this sort of thing?”
 If the quotation ends a sentence that is a question, place a
question mark outside the quotation.
 Will Katniss turn into an Avox and “wait on future tributes of
Panem”?
 If a question mark occurs where a comma or period would
normally be required, omit the comma or period.
 “And what did they say?” says Cinna carefully.
Quoting Prose
 If a prose quotation runs no more than four lines and
requires no special emphasis, put it in quotation marks
and incorporate it into the text.
 Hashim and his wife “had successfully sought to
inculcate the virtues of thrift, plain dealing and a
healthy independence of spirit” (Rushdie 2856).
 The “glassy contentment” of Hashim’s household is
destroyed “beyond all hope of repair” (Rushdie 2856).
Block Quote
If a quotation extends to more than four lines, set it off from your text by beginning a new line,
indenting one inch from the left margin, and typing it double-spaced, without adding quotation
marks.
The Magistrate in J.M. Coetzee’s Waiting for the Barbarians complicates the notion of justice
as he translates the natives’ wooden slips:
See, there is only a single character. It is the barbarian character war, but it has
senses too. It can stand for vengeance, and, if you turn it upside down like
to read justice. There is no knowing which sense is intended.
cunning. (112)
other
this, it can be made
That is part of barbarian
Block Quote
If you quote two or more paragraphs, indent the first line of each paragraph an additional
quarter inch. If the first sentence quoted does not begin a paragraph in the source, however,
do not indent it the additional amount.
Margaret Atwood artfully weaves dialogue and striking details throughout her short story,
“Hairball”:
“Is this abnormal?” Kat asked the doctor, who smiled. Now that he had gone in and come out
again, unscathed, he was less clenched.
“Abnormal? No,” he said carefully, as if breaking the news to a mother about a freakish
accident to her newborn. “Let’s just say it’s fairly common.” Kat was a little disappointed. She would
have preferred uniqueness. (34)
Poetry
 If you quote a single line, put it in quotation marks
within your text.
 Auden ironically ends his poem: “Had anything been
wrong, we should certainly have heard” (30).
 If incorporating two or three lines, use a slash with a
space on each side to separate them.
 Auden ironically ends his poem: “Was he free? Was he
happy? The question is absurd: / Had anything been
wrong, we should certainly have heard” (29-30).
Poetry
 Verse quotations of more than three lines should begin on a new line. Indent
each line one inch from the left margin and double-space between lines,
adding no quotation marks that do not appear in the original.
Elizabeth Bishop’s “In the Waiting Rom” is rich in evocative detail:
It was winter. It got dark
early. The waiting room
was full of grown-up people,
arctics and overcoats,
lamps and magazines. (6-10)
Alterations of Sources
 You can provide supplementary information, but keep
them to a minimum and make sure to distinguish
them from the original text.
 A comment or an explanation that immediately
follows the closing quotation mark appears in
parentheses.
 Lincoln specifically advocated a government “for the
people” (emphasis added).
 Shaw admitted, “Nothing can extinguish my interest in
Shakespear” (sic).
Alterations of Sources
 A comment or an explanation that goes inside the
quotation must appear within square brackets, not
parentheses.
 Milton’s Satan speaks of his “study [pursuit] of
revenge.”
 He claimed he could provide “hundreds of examples
[of court decisions] to illustrate the historical tension
between church and state.”
Alterations of Sources
 If a pronoun in a quotation seems unclear, you may
add an identification in square brackets.
 Okonkwo is forewarned by the elder Ezuedu: “Do not
bear a hand in his [Ikemefuna’s] death” (Achebe 40).
 Certainly, Achebe considers his novel Things Fall Apart
to be “an act of atonement with [his] past” (193).
 In the first act he soliloquies, “Why she would hang on
him [Hamlet’s father] / As if increase of appetite had
grown / By what it fed on. . . .”
Ellipsis
 Whenever you omit words from a quotation, the resulting
passage—your prose and the quotation integrated into it—
should be grammatically complete and correct.
 For an ellipsis within a sentence, use three periods with a
space before each and a space after the last
( . . . ).
In surveying various responses to plagues in the
Middle Ages, Barbara W. Tuchman writes,
“Medical thinking . . . stressed air as the
communicator of disease, ignoring sanitation or
visible carriers” (101-02).
Ellipsis
 When the ellipsis coincides with the end of your sentence,
use three periods with a space before each following a
sentence period—that is, four periods, with no space before
the first or after the last.
While describing his experiences in Africa, Marlow
explains, “We were wanderers on prehistoric earth,
on an earth that wore the aspect of an unknown
planet. We could have fancied ourselves the first of
men taking possession of an accursed inheritance,
to be subdued at the cost of profound anguish and of
excessive toil. . . .”
Ellipsis
 If a parenthetical reference follows the ellipsis at the end of
your sentence, however, use three periods with a space
before each, and place the sentence period after the final
parenthesis.
While describing his experiences in Africa, Marlow
explains, “We were wanderers on prehistoric earth,
on an earth that wore the aspect of an unknown
planet. We could have fancied ourselves the first of
men taking possession of an accursed inheritance,
to be subdued at the cost of profound anguish and of
excessive toil . . .” (Conrad 31-32).