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MLA Style for Bibliographies and Citations A Brief Introduction.
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Primary Rule Include the least amount of information that will allow your readers to find the precise work you used.
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Books Last, First. Title. City: Publisher, Year. Examples: Allende, Isabel. Retrato en Sepia. Barcelona: Plaza Janés, 2000. ---. Portrait in Sepia. Trans. Margaret Sayers Peden. New York: Harper Collins, 2001.
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Essays in Books Last, First. “Essay Title.” Book Title. Ed. First Last. City: Publisher, Year. Pages. Example: Navarro Tejero, Antonia and Manuel Cabello Pino. “Magic Realism in Arundhati Roy and Isabel Allende: The Experience of Dislocation.” Figures of Belatedness: Postmodernist Fiction in English. Ed. Javie Gascueña Gahete and Paula Martín Salván. Córdoba, Spain: Universidad de Córdoba, 2006. 225-37.
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Articles Last, First. “Article Title.” Journal Title volume.issue (year): pages. Note: Do not include the issue number if the journal is paginated continuously. Include it if you’re not sure. Example: Lagos, María Inés. “Female Voices from the Borderlands: Isabel Allende’s Paula and Retrato en Sepia.” Latin American Literary Review 30.60 (2002): 112-127.
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Online-Only or HTML Full Text Articles Last, First. "Article Title." Journal Title volume.issue (year): pages if paginated. date.. Example: Foley, Barbara. "'Lepers in the Acropolis': Liberalism, Capitalism, and the Crisis in Academic Labor." Contemporary Literature 39 (1998): 317-335. ProQuest. 20 April 2007..
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Adding Annotations After the last element of the bibliographic entry, write a short paragraph describing the work and its relevance to your research.
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Formatting the Bibliography Titled “Works Cited.” (title centered) Hanging indents Double spaced, just like the body of the paper. Alphabetical by author’s last name. If there is no author, use the title instead. Capitalize all major words in titles.
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Primary Rule The rule of least information, plus the rule of least confusion and greatest readability.
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Citing Quotations, Paraphrases, and Ideas (last name, page number; last name, page number). Include a shortened title if last name alone is not enough to uniquely identify the work. Place at the end of a sentence, before the period, unless that’s confusing. Example: (Allende “Portrait,” 278)
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Questions? Either about MLA style or about your research.
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