Title: MLA Style
1MLA Style
- Prepared by Diane Dates Casey
21.11. Language Style
- Good organization development of ideas.
- Unity coherence of presentation.
- Command of sentence structure, grammar diction.
- Avoid unsubstantiated generalizations about such
personal qualities as age, economic class,
ethnicity, sexual orientation, political or
religious beliefs, race, or sex.
3Avoid Sexist Language
- Avoid using he, him, or his to express meaning
that includes girls or women. - Recast such sentences in the plural or eliminate
the pronouns. - Focus the discussion on a particular person
rather than speaking generally. - Avoid terms that unnecessarily integrate a
persons sex with a job or title.
43.3. Italics
- Either underline or use italics for titles of
books, journals or plays. - Be consistent.
53.7.2. Prose Quotations
- If a prose quotation is less than four lines, put
it in quotation marks integrate it into the
text. - Quotes can be less than full sentences.
- If a quotation runs more than four lines, set it
off from the text by beginning a new line,
indenting one inch or ten spaces from the left
margin, and typing double-spaced, without adding
quotation marks.
6In-text Reference Following Prose Quotes
- Quotes that are integrated into the text are
followed by a parenthetical reference and a
period. Example For Charles Dickens the
eighteenth century was both the best of times
and the worst of times (35). - A parenthetical reference at the end of an off
set quotation is preceded by a period. Example
the other little boys began to shake and sob
too. (Golding 186)
73.7.3. Poetry Quotations
- If part or all of a single line of verse is
quoted, put it in quotation marks within the
text. - Two or three lines of poetry may be incorporated
in this way with slashes (/) between the lines. - Verse quotations of more than three lines should
begin on a new line. Unless the quotation
involves unusual spacing, 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.
8In-text References Following Poetry Quotes
- Poetry is cited by lines, not pages.
- In-text references for poetry follow the same
pattern as for prose quotations.
9Example Bradstreet frames the poem with a sense
of mortality All things within this fading
world hath end (1).Example Elizabeth Bishops
In the Waiting Room 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)
103.7.4. Drama Quotations
- When quoting dialogue between two or more
characters in a play, set the quotation off from
your text. - Begin each part of the dialogue with the
appropriate characters name indented one inch
(10 spaces) from the left margin and written in
all capital letters HAMLET. Follow the name
with a period, and start the quotation. Indent
all subsequent lines in that characters speech
an additional quarter inch (3 spaces).
11- When the dialogue shifts to another character,
start a new line indented one inch (10 spaces)
from the left margin. Maintain this pattern
throughout the entire quotation.
12In-text references for drama are cited by act,
scene and lines.
A short time later Lear loses the final symbol of
his former power, the soldiers who make up his
train GONERIL.
Hear me, my lord. What
need you five-and-twenty, ten or five,
To follow in a house where twice so
many Have a command to tend
you? REGAN
What need one? LEAR O, reason
not the need! (2.4.254-58)
135.3. List of Works Cited Other Source Lists
- Types of lists Works Cited, Annotated
Bibliography, Work Consulted, Selected
Bibliography.
Example of Annotated Bibliography Thomson,
Stith. The Folktale. New York Dryden, 1946. A
comprehensive survey of the most popular
folktales, including their histories and their
uses in literary works.
145.6. Books
- Books by a Single Author
Gerber, John C. Mark Twain. Boston Twayne, 1988. - Two or more Books by One Author Frye,
Northrop. Anatomy of Criticism Four Essays.
Princeton Princeton U P, 1957.
---, The
Double Vision Language and Meaning in Religion.
Toronto U of Toronto P, 1991 - Books by Two Authors
Long, E. Hudson and J.R. LeMaster. The Mark
Twain Handbook. New York Garland, 1985.
155.6.2. Anthology or Compilation
- Editor of an anthology
Feldman, Paula R., ed. British Women Poets of the
Romantic Era. Baltimore Johns Hopkins UP,
1997. - Compiler
Sevillano, Mando, comp. The
Hopi Way Tales from a Vanishing Culture.
Flagstaff Northland, 1986. - Compiler and editor
Spafford, Peter, comp. and ed.
Interference The Story of Czechoslovakia in the
Words of Its Writers. Cheltenham New Clarion,
1992.
165.6.7. A Work in an Anthology
- Essays in an Anthology
Allende, Isabel. Toads Mouth. Trans. Margaret
Sayers Peden. A Hammock beneath the Mangoes
Stories from Latin America. Ed. Thomas Colchie.
New York Plume, 1992. 83-88.
A Witchcraft
Story. The Hopi Way Tales from a Vanishing
Culture. Comp. Mando Sevillano. Flagstaff
Northland, 1986. 33-42.
17- Works published before
Franklin, Benjamin. Emigration to
America. 1782. The Faber Book of America. Ed.
Christopher Ricks and William L. Vance. Boston
Faber, 1992. 24-26. - Previously Published Scholarly Article in a
Collection
Frye,
Northrop. Literary and Linguistic Scholarhip in
a Postliterate Age. PMLA 99 (1984) 990-95.
Rpt. in Myth and Metaphor Selected Essays,
1974-88. Ed. Robert D. Denham. Charlottesville
UP of Virginia, 1990. 18-27.
18Roberts, Sheila. A Confined World A Rereading
of Pauline Smith. World Literature Written in
English 24 (1984) 232-38. Rpt. in
Twentieth- Century Literary Criticism. Ed. Dennis
Poupard. Vol. 25. Detroit Gale, 1988. 399-402.
195.6.8. Article in a Reference Book
- Familiar Reference Books
Azimuthal Equidistant Projection.
Merriam-Websters Collegiate Dictionary. 10th
ed. 1993. Noon. The Oxford
English Dictionary. 2nd ed. 1989. - Citing a specific definition
Noon. Def. 4b. The Oxford
English Dictionary. 2nd ed. 1989.
20- Less Familiar Reference Books
Allen, Anita L. Privacy in Health Care.
Encyclopedia of Bioethics. Ed. Warren T. Reich.
Rev. ed. 5 vols. New York Macmillan-Simon,
1995.
215.6.9. Introduction, Preface, Foreword or
Afterword
- Foreword
Borges, Jorge Luis. Foreword. Selected
Poems, 1923- 1967. By Borges. Ed. Norman Thomas
Di Giovanni. New York Delta-Dell, 1973.
xv-xvii. - Introduction
Drabble,
Margaret. Introduction. Middlemarch. By George
Eliot. New York Bantam, 1982. v-xi. - Afterword
Elliott, Emory. Afterword.
The Jungle. By Upton Sinclair. New York Signet,
1990. 342-50.
225.6.19. Book with Multiple Publishers
- Examples
Duff. J. Wight. A Literary History of
Rome From the Origins to the Close of the
Golden Age. Ed. A. M. Duff. 3rd ed. 1953.
London Benn New York Barnes, 1967.
Wells, H.G. The Time Machine.
1895 London Dent Rutland Tuttle, 1992.
235.6.26. Unpublished Dissertations
- Example
Jerinic, Maria. Reading for
Nation Constructions of National Identity in
Novels by British Women Writers of the Late
Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries (Anne
Radcliffe, Fanny Burney, Jane Austen, Charlotte
Bonte, Elizabeth Gaskill). Diss. State U of NY
at Stony Brook, 1997. - Moring, Meg Montgomery. Death and the Concept of
Womans Value in the Novels of Jane Austen.
Diss. U of North TX, 1996.
245.7. Citing Journal Articles Other Publications
in Periodicals
- Articles in a scholarly journal with continuous
pagination. Example Carter, Steven
R. Images of men in Lorraine Hansberrys
writing. Black American Literature Forum 19
(1979) 160-62. - Articles in a scholarly journal that pages each
issue separately. Example
Barthelme, Frederick. Architecture. Kansas
Quarterly 133-4 (1981) 77-80.
255.7.5. Article in a Newspaper
- Example
Rubin, Merle. " In So Many Words, all the
World Became His Stage, and Ours." Wall Street
Journal 6 July 2000, Eastern ed. A24
265.7.6. Article in a Magazine
- Kermode, Frank. "If it's out there, it's in
here." New York Times Book Review 1 Oct. 2000
12. Oakes, Edward T.
"Never at a loss for words." Commonweal 8
Sept.2000 38-39.
275.7.7. Reviews
- Bemrose, John. Rev. of The Correspondence of
Northrop Frye and Helen Kemp, 1932-1939, ed.
Robert D. Denham. Maclean's 7 Apr. 1997 93.
Twardy, Chuck. "Pagers,
pageants and powwows." Rev. of As Long as the
Waters Flow Native Americans in the South and
East, by Edward Sheriff Curtis. Afterimage 26.6
(1999) 17.
285.9.7 Articles from Online Scholarly Journals
found in a Library Subscription Database
(Full Text ASCII) Meyer, William, E.H. Jr. "
Faulkner, Hemingway, et al. the Emersonian test
of American authorship." The Mississippi
Quarterly 51 (1998). WilsonSelect Plus. OCLC
FIRSTSEARCH. GSU U Lib., University Park, IL.
20 Nov. 2001 lthttp//newfirstsearch.oclc.org/gt.
29(Full Page Image - PDF) "Spectacular Sympathy
Visuality and Ideology in Dickens's A Christmas
Carol." PMLA 109 (1994) 254-67. Research
Library. PROQUEST. GSU U Lib., University Park,
IL. 20 Nov. 2001 lthttp//proquest.umi.com/gt.
305.9.4.a. Article in a Online Scholarly Journal
- (Full Text ASCII)
LeBlanc, Jim. "The
Closing Words of Finnegans Wake." Hypermedia
Joyce Studies 2.1 (1999). 20 Nov. 2001
lthttp//www.2street.com/hjs/leblanc/index.htmlgt.
Reid, Nicholoas.
"Coleridge, Language, and Imagination."
Romanticism On the Net 22 (2001). 20 Nov. 2001
lthttp//users.ox.ac.uk/scat0385/22reid.htmlgt.
315.9.2.c. Professional or Personal Web Site
- Baxter, Gisele. Notes on Ernest Hemingway's The
Sun Also Rises. 4 May 1999. 14 June 2000.
lthttp//www.interchange.ubc.ca/
gmb/sun.htmlgt. Dawe, James. Jane Austen
Page. 15 Sept. 1998 lthttp//nyquist.ee.ualberta.c
a/dawe/austen.htmlgt. Lancashire, Ian. Home
page. 1 May 1998 lthttp//www.chass.utoronto.ca80
80/ian/gt. Romance Languages and Literatures
Home Page. 1 Jan. 1997. Dept. of Romance Langs.
And Lits., U of Chicago. 8 July 1998
lthttp//humanities.uchicago.edu/romance/gt.
326.3. In-text References
- Authors Name in Text
Tannen has argued this point (178-85). - Authors Name in Reference
This point has already been argued (Tannen
178-85).
336.4.1. Citing an Entire Nonprint Work
- Electronic Sources
William J. Mitchells City of Bits
discusses architecture and urban life in the
context of the digital telecommunications
revolution.
Works Cited
Mitchell,
William J. City of Bits Space, Place, and the
Informationbahn. Cambridge MIT P, 1995. MIT P
Electronic Books. 9 July 1998 lthttp//mitpress.m
et.edu/e-books/City_of_Bitsgt.
346.4.2. Citing Part of a Work
- Electronic Sources
The study of comparative
literature, Bill Readings wrote, takes off from
the idea of humanity (6). Works Cited
Readings, Bill.
Translatio and Comparative Literature The
Terror of European Humanism. Surfaces 1.11
(1991) 19 pp. 8 July 1998 lthttp//tornade.ere.u
montreal.ca/guedpm/Surfaces/vo l1/readin-a/htmlgt.
356.4.6. Citing Two or More Works by the Same Author
- Shakespeares King Lear has been called a comedy
of the grotesque (Frye, Anatomy 237).
For Northrop
Frye, ones death is not a unique experience, for
every moment we have lived through we have also
died out of into another order (Double Vision
85). Works Cited
Frye,Northrop. Anatomy of
Criticism Four Essays. Princeton Princeton UP,
1957.
---, The Double Vision Language
and Meaning in Religion. Toronto U of Toronto
P, 1991.
366.4.7. Citing Indirect Sources
- Whenever possible, take material from an original
source, not a secondhand one. - If what is quoted or paraphrased is a quotation,
the source is indirect.
Samuel Johnson admitted that Edmund Burke was an
extraordinary man (qtd. In Boswell 2 450).
Works Cited
Boswell,
James. The Life of Johnson. Ed. George Birkbeck
Hill and L. F. Powell. 6 vols. Oxford
Clarendon, 1934-50.
376.4.8. Citing Literary Religious Works
- Include the name of the author in either your
text or the in-text reference. - In the reference for classic prose works, include
book, section, part, or chapter numbers as
applicable.
Raskolnikov first appears in Crime and Punishment
as a man contemplating a terrible act but
frightened of meeting his talkative landlady on
the stairs (Dostoevsky 1 pt. 1, ch. 1).
386.4.8. Use Arabic Numerals
- Use arabic numerals rather than Roman numerals
for division and page numbers.
Our Shakespearean protagonist seems resolute
at first when he asserts, Haste me to knowt,
that I, with wings as swift / As meditation /
May sweep to my revenge (Ham. 1.5.35-37), but he
soon has second thoughts another tragic figure,
initially described as too full o th milk of
human kindness (Mac. 1.5.17), quickly descends
into horrific slaughter.
397. Abbreviations
- 7.2. Time Designations
- 7.3. Geographic Names
- 7.4 Common Scholarly Abbreviations
- 7.5 Publishers Names
- 7.7 Titles of Literary and Religious Works Bible,
Shakespeare, Chaucer, Other Literary Works