Documente Academic
Documente Profesional
Documente Cultură
Workshop
Presented by the
TCC Southeast
Campus Writing
Center
In-text Citation
•“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times,” wrote Charles Dickens
of the eighteenth century.
•Reflecting on the “incident” in Baltimore, Cullen concludes, “Of all the things
that happened there / That’s all that I remember” (11-12).
Book with One Author (p.149, MLA; p. 428-429, RW; p.624, BH)
Required Information Author. Title. City: Publisher, Year. Print.
Sample Works Cited Entry Hulme, Keri. The Bone People. New York: Penguin,
1986. Print.
Sample Parenthetical Citation After selling his house and taking his bus to a northern
(Hulme 341).
Two or More Books by the (p.133, MLA; p.438, RW;p.626, BH)
Same Author
Required Information Author. Title. City: Publisher, Year. Print.
1149-54. Print.
Sample Parenthetical Citation Although Alice faithfully waits for her lover’s return,
“[…] all the time the creeping fear that he would never
Sample Parenthetical Citation Romeo and Juliet presents an opposition between two
worlds: “the world of the everyday…and the world of
romance.” Although the two lovers are part of the world
of romance, their language of love nevertheless becomes
“fully responsive to the tang of actuality” (Zender 138,
141).
An Edited Book (p.158, MLA; p.439, RW; p.628 BH)
Year. Print.
Sample Works Cited Entry Kirszner, Laurie G., and Stephen R. Mandell, eds.
Sample Works Cited Entry Kingston, Maxine Hong. “No Name Woman.” Oates and
Atwan 383-94.
Oates, Joyce Carol, and Robert Atwan, eds. The Best
American Essays of the Century. Boston: Houghton,
2000. Print.
Walker, Alice. “Looking for Zora.” Oates and Atwan 395-411.
Sample Parenthetical Citation Walker describes the experience of finding Zora Hurston’s
Sample Works Cited Entry Finding Neverland. Dir. Marc Forster. Perf. Meryl
Streep, Kate Winslet, Julie Christie, Radha
Mitchell, and Dustin Hoffman. Miramax, 2004.
Film.
Sample Parenthetical Citation Barrie, in the film Finding Neverland, is inspired by the
imaginative games he plays with four young boys.
Sacred Texts (p. 164, 227, MLA; p. 435,442, RW; p.630, BH)
Required Information Title. Editor (or Translator). City: Publisher, Year. Print.
Version used.
Sample Works Cited Entry The Oxford Annotated Bible with the Apocrypha.
Ed. Herbert G. May and Bruce M. Metzger. New
York: Oxford UP, 1965. Print. Rev. Standard Vers.
Sample Parenthetical Citation Consider the words of Solomon: “If your enemy is
hungry, give him bread to eat; and if he is thirsty, give
him water to drink” (Oxford Annotated Bible, Prov.
25.21).
Indirect Sources (p. 226, MLA; p. 432, RW; p. 617, BH)
Sample Works Cited Entry Boswell, James. The Life of Johnson. Ed. George
Birkbeck Hill and L. F. Powell. 6 vols. Oxford:
Clarendon, n.d. Print.
Sample Parenthetical Citation Samuel Johnson admitted that Edmund Burke was an
“extraordinary man” (qtd. in Boswell 2: 450).
A Work without Stated (p. 179-87, MLA; p. 447-49, RW)
Publication Information or
Pagination
Required Information Author. Title. City: Publisher, Year. Print.
____________________________
Sample Works Cited Entry Bauer, Johann. Kafka und Prag. [Stuttgart]: Belser,
[1971?]. Print.
Michelangelo. The Sistine Chapel. New York: Wings,
1992. N. pag. Print.
Photographic View Album of Cambridge. [Eng.]: n.p.,
n.d. N. pag. Print.
Article in a Scholarly Journal (p.137, MLA; p. 444-45, RW; p.633, BH)
Sample Works Cited Entry Kromholz, Linda. “Reading and Insight in Toni
Sample Parenthetical Citation According to one critic, “Toni Morrison uses repetition
Sample Works Cited Entry Ash, Susan. “The Bone People after Te Kaihau.” World
Literature Written in English 29.1 (1989): 123-
35. Rpt. in Contemporary Literary Criticism. Ed.
Jeffrey W. Hunter. Vol. 130. Detroit: Gale, 2000.
48-55. Print.
Sample Parenthetical Citation According to Susan Ash, “Kerewin may repress her
‘essential’ self (the self who can lead), and present a
mask of self-satisfied isolation to society, but at no time
does she adopt conventional female roles” (49).
Document from an Internet (p. 181-90, MLA; p. 447-53,RW; p.636-46, BH)
Site (1)
Required Information Author. Title of Work. Site Sponsor. Last Date Updated
(A <URL> text is optional.)
(or the date of publication). Web. Access Date.
<URL>.
Sample Works Cited Entry Garcia Landa, Jose Angel, comp. A Bibliography of
subjects.”
Document from an Internet (p. 181-90, MLA; p. 447-52,RW; p.636-46, BH)
Site (2)—Professional Web site
Required Information Author. “Title of Short Work.” Title of Web site.
(A <URL> text is optional.)
Sponsor of Web site. Update date (or “n.d.” ).
features/ptsd.htm>.
Sample Parenthetical Citation In the article, Mitchell points out that the name of Post
–Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) “ is cold and
clinical, but its symptoms can be terrifying, calamitous
and visceral.”
Document from an Internet Site (3) (p. 181-90, MLA; p.447-53, RW; p.636-46, BH)
Required Information “Title of Short Work.” Site Title. Sponsor of Web
(A <URL> text is optional.) site. Update date (or “n.d.” ). Web. Access
Date. <URL>.
Sample Works Cited Entry “Girl in Peanut Butter Lawsuit Receives Kidney
Transplant.” FoxNews.com. Fox News
Channel. 19 June 2007. Web.19 June 2007.
<http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,28429
8,00.html>.
Sample Parenthetical Citation
Food contamination can have serious consequences;
Required Information for Using Author. Title of the Work. City: Publisher, Year.
an Electronic Book (faculty Sponsor of Web site. Web. Access Date.
preference)
Sample Works Cited Entry Kahn, Coppelia. Roman Shakespeare Warriors,
Wounds, and Women. London: Routeledge, 1997.
NetLibrary. Web. 14 June 2007.
Required Information for Using Author. “Title of the Article.” Title of the Newspaper.
Article from a Newspaper Date. Edition: Session’s Page. Publisher or
Sponsor of the Site, Web. Access Date.
Sample Works Cited Entry Eisinger, Jesse. “Ahead of the Tape.” Wall Street
Journal 3 June 2003, eastern ed.: CI. Proquest.
Web. 10 June 2003.
MLA Works Cited Pages: The Basics
Your heading should be in the top right-hand corner, one-half inch from the
top of the page. It includes your last name and the page number. Your
Works Cited page is the last page of your paper, so if you have written a
four-page paper, the number on your Works Cited page should be 5.
The entire Works Cited page should be double spaced. Before you begin
typing the Works Cited, you should change the line spacing to “Double” by
going to Home and Paragraph on the tool bar.
The title (Works Cited) should be centered on first line of the page. Do not
italicize, underline, or bold the title. Do not put quotation marks around it.
It should be in the same size font as the rest of your paper.
All of your entries should be alphabetized by the first word in the entry.
Usually this word is the author or editor’s last name; entries with unknown
authors or editors should be alphabetized by the first word of the title.
The first line of each entry should begin on the left margin. If the entry is
longer than one line, each subsequent line should be indented one-half
inch (a tab).
Italicize all titles of books, plays, newspapers, journals, magazines, films,
albums, and CDs.
Put quotation marks around all titles of articles, short stories, essays,
poems, and reference book entries.
For More Information:
Consult the 7th edition of the MLA Handbook
for Writers of Research Papers and the 6th
edition of the Rules for Writers.