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Font size 11
or 12;
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Referring to Sources
You dont need reference to sources when your essay/article contains either original ideas or
that kind of information you can find in any book. Otherwise, you should use one of the four
methods of citation. The first two are the commonest, namely, the MLA (Modern Languages
Association) and the Oxford and Cambridge style.
The MLA style recommends in-text citation. You need it when you quote, paraphrase or use
the information from certain sources. Here is an example:
The Interviewer looked and at last saw the butterfly though he failed to see the cat (Wolf, 195).
If you continue to use this source, in the next quotation you dont need to mention the author
anymore, the page of the book will do:
According to Virginia Wolf, Roger Fry showed him a chair, saying that was a conversational
chair (195).
If you quote from several books of the same author, then you need to mention the title of the
book you are quoting from:
Most writers, to hear them talk, believe in the existence of a spirit, according to the age they live
in, the Muse, Genius, and Inspiration (Wolf, Captains Death Bed, 3).
If you refer to more than one author, give their surnames. For example: Frampton and Koetter,
5). If there are more than three authors, give the surname of the first followed by et al (Latin:
and others).
If you refer to a source found in a book quoted by the author of that book, one that you didnt
actually read, you mention in brackets like this: qtd. in Wolf, 195.
This style of citation replaces the footnotes. However, you can use footnotes for
your own remarks.
Works cited (Bibliography)
I.
Books
a)
Surname, First name. Title of Book. Place of publication:
Publishers name, Year
b) A book with an editor
Briggs, Katharine, ed. British Folk-tales and Legends. London: Routledge, 1977
c) A book with two or three authors/editors:
Gent, Lucy and Nigel Llewellyn, eds. Renaissance Bodies: The Human Figure in
English Culture c. 1540-1660. London: Reaktion, 1990
d) A book with more than three authors/editors
Carrithers, M., et al. The Category of the Person: Anthropology, Philosophy, History.
Cambridge, Cambridge UP, 1985.
e) A translation
Ovid. Metamorphoses. Trans. A.D. Melville. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1986
(Brown, 2011)
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II.
Articles
III.
Electronic sources
a) CD-roms:
Title. CD. Place of Publication: Publisher, Year of issue
b) Websites:
Authors surname, name. Title of article. The overall title of the
website/ or Home Page if there is no title. Date of publication or last
updated information (if any). Name of institution sponsoring the
website (if any). Date you accessed the site < http: // www. etc
IV.
This addresses lecture notes taken during your courses. For example:
Teodorescu, Magda. Lecture. Ion Mincu University of Architecture and Urbanism, 2014
The Oxford and Cambridge Style
This style is mainly used in English-speaking countries and is given various names, such as:
the numbered-note style, the footnote/endnote style or, the running notes style.
Basically, whenever you quote a book, paraphrase an opinion in a book you place the
information in footnotes/endnotes. Preferably, endnotes are used in longer essays, such as
dissertations, books, etc.
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In many occasions, you have to quote the same source several times. To spare yourself the effort
of repeating the same footnote, you can use this:
-
Op. cit. which in Latin means: opere citato, that is quoted work.
Ibid. which is ibidem, meaning in the same place. You can use it when you refer to
exactly the same book cited in a previous footnote or endnote.
Passim, meaning scattered; you use it if the content can be found in various parts of
the book/article.
PLAGIARISM
Plagiarism is defined by many academic institutions which make their mission to punish any
attempt at plagiarism. Here is the definition given by the University of London:
Plagiarism is defined as the presentation of another person's thoughts or words or artefacts or software as
though they were a student's own. Any quotation from the published or unpublished works of other
persons must, therefore, be clearly identified as such by being placed inside quotation marks, and
students should identify their sources as accurately and fully as possible. A series of short quotations from
several different sources, if not clearly identified as such, constitutes plagiarism just as much as does a
single unacknowledged long quotation from a single source. Equally, if a student summarises another
person's ideas, judgements, figures, software or diagrams, a reference to that person in the text must be
made and the work referred to must be included in the bibliography.
Now, what should you do in order to avoid charges of plagiarism? First of all, use your own brain to
elaborate an essay/article. In many cases, students think that if they replace a word or two, they will
definitely avoid it, which is far from being true. So, first of all, here are some rules (qtd. in Brown,
Daniela. Lecture. 2011)
Published critic
Smart student
DO
NOT
One important
consideration
It is relevant to
consider
DO
IT
It is important to
consider
Finally, it is worth
mentioning
The character is thinking
of
ORIGINAL TEXT: Joyce Williams et al. Lizzie Borden: A Case Book of Family and Crime in
the 1890s, p.1:
The rise of industry, the growth of cities, and the expansion of the population were the three
great developments of late nineteenth century American history. As new, larger, steam-powered
factories became a feature of the American landscape in the East, they transformed farm hands
into industrial laborers, and provided jobs for a rising tide of immigrants. With industry came
urbanization the growth of large cities (like Fall River, Massachusetts, where the Bordens lived)
which became the centers of production as well as of commerce and trade.
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UNACCEPRABLE
PARAPHRASE/PLAGIARISM
ACCEPTABLE PARAPHRASE
PLAGIARISM because:
ACCEPTABLE because:
e student uses hi