College Term Papers
Help Citations

It is important to remember that every single piece of
information you obtain from a source must be cited in your paper. This applies
not only to quotes, but to every single fact you incorporate. There are several
methods for doing citations, but it's best just to choose one and remain
consistent. Below are directions for doing citations in the MLA style, one of
the most widely recognized formats.
Bibliography
The first step is to make a bibliography, inclusive of all works
you've cited in your paper. What follows is a list of proper forms for various
types of sources.
Book Vendler, Helen. Poems. Poets. Poetry.
Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1995. If the book you are using is an
edition other than the first, include this information (e.g. "Id ed. ")
directly after the title.
Article or other work in a
Journal Sedgwick, Eve. "Symbolism and Sexuality in Faulkner."
Mississippi Quarterly 10 (1987): 69-78.
Article, chapter,
excerpt, or work in an edited collection or anthology Jonson, Ben.
"Though I am Young." The Norton Anthology of English Literature.
6th ed. Ed. M.H. Abrams et al. New York: Norton, 1993.
1240-1241.
Item in a collection of the author's work with no separate
editor Lawrence, D.H. Tickets Please." In Collected
Stories. London: Heinemann, 1974. 314-325.
Article or interview
in a magazine or newspaper Clift, Eleanor. "Clinton's Right Turn."
Newsweek July 1999: 55-56.
Article in an encyclopedia or other
reference work "Aardvarks." Encyclopedia Britannica.
1975.
Review or editorial Leys, Simon. "Balzac's Genius and
Other Paradoxes." Rev. of Balzac: A Life, by Graham Robb. The New
Republic 20 December 1994. 26-7.
Preface, introduction,
forward Lewis, C.S. Preface. Phantastes. By George MacDonald.
New York: Penguin Books, 1945.
Letters or papers from an
archive Reagan, Ronald. Papers. Ronald Regan Presidential Library, Simi
Valley, CA.
Personal Letter Sheley, Erin L. Letter to the
author. 10 January 2000.
Unpublished paper or dissertation
Borelli, Jessica. "Out of the Darkness: Dreams and their Relation to Childhood
Sexuality." Diss. University of California, Berkeley, 1999.
Letter in
a published collection Montagu, Lady Mary Wortley. To Alexander
Pope." 7 September 1718. Selected Letters. Ed. Robert Halsband. New
York: Viking-Penguin, 1986.
Legal Case Watson v. Dunhill Inc.
135 USPQ 88 2d Cir 1967.
Book with an author and an editor
Dante Alighieri. The Inferno. Ed. Robert Pinsky. Boston: Boston
University Press, 1996.
Book in several volumes Keats, John.
Collected Poems. Plays, and. Letters. 2 vols. Ed Jon Stallworthy.
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1988. Books in a series
Peterson, Margaret Wallace Stevens and the Idealist Tradition. Studies
in Modern Literature 24. Ann Arbor: Umi Research Press,
t983.
Reprinted Book Douglas, Frederick. Narrative of the
Life of Frederick Douglas. 1857. New York: Penguin Books,
1993.
Translated Book Nietzsche, Friedrich. The Gay
Science. Trans. Walter Kaufman. New York: Vintage, 1974.86.
Work,
article, information, or graphic on the Web Sheley, Erin. "Strange
Bedfellows: Should the Republican Party Cozy Up to the Homosexual Vote?"
http://www.hcs.harvard.edu/~hpr cited 10 January 1999.
Telnet or FTP
site "Aardvark." Oxford English Dictionary, 2d ed. 1971 [Online
book].
<telnet://UWIN.U.WASHINGTON.EDU/I/REF/OED/aardvak>. Contribution
to a listserv or newsgroup Raner, Claude. raner@wiz.bristol.ac.uk
(1995, May 3). Against guns. 3 May 1997.
<alt.weapons.ops>.
E-mail message Shankar, Ganesh.
gshankar@leland.stanford.edu "I'M Sorry." Personal e-mail. 23 March
1999.
Class lecture, conference paper, speech, or performance
Eck, Diana. Lecture on Shaivism. Literature and Arts C-18, Harvard University.
Cambridge, MA. 14 December, 1999.
Personal or telephone
interview Engell, James. Telephone interview. 6 March
1998.
Artwork, illustration, or cartoon Alma-Tadema, Sir
Lawrence. The Rite of Spring. J. Paul Getty Museum, Los
Angeles.
Musical recording, score, or liner notes Gerswhin,
George. Rhapsody in Blue. Cond. John Williams. Boston Pops Orchestra.
DeccaDM-3988,1995.
Film, video, or television program
Stories of the City. Videocassette. Dir. Greg Stone. Narr. Paria Kooklan.
Panorama Entertainment, 1999.
In-text Citations
The easiest way to cite your sources throughout your paper is by
using the parenthetical technique.
For a humanities paper, you include the last name of the author,
and the page in which the reference was found, at the end of the sentence.
Example: "The Leviathan suggests that
in a state of nature, man looks out only for his own interests (Hobbes
56)."
For a social science or science paper, include the author's last
name and the date.
Example: "The regressive motions of the planets
were, for a time, explained in terms of epicycles (Koestler,
1992).
Quotations
When using direct quotations less than three lines long, you may
integrate them as described in the previous sections. When using a quote that
is longer than three lines long, follow these guidelines:
- Skip down two lines from the rest of your essay to begin
the quote
- Indent all lines 10 spaces from the left margin
- Single space the quote
- Don't put an indented block in quotation marks
- Indicate the speaker and the context of the quote before
you insert it
- End the sentence directly before it with a colon
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