Title: Works Cited
1Works Cited
2All papers which contain in-text citations
require a bibliography. The Modern Language
Association recognizes two types of bibliography
- 1. The shorter Works Cited, which only lists
works referenced in your essay. - The longer Works Consulted, which lists all works
you may have examined during the preparation of
your text.
For our purposes, the simpler Works Cited page
will suffice.
3The Works Cited page is the last page (or more)
of your essay.
- The page is numbered, just like all the other
pages of your essay, and the title will be set up
as follows
Hershberger 8 Works Cited
4Order of Operations
- Book entries are alphabetized in a specific
order - 1. Author, by last name.
- 2. Minor title.
- 3. Major title.
- 4. Date of original publication.
- 5. Place of publication.
- 6. Publisher.
- 7. Year of publication.
- 8. Pages cited.
- This order applies, with minor variations, to
most other types of entry.
Bettelheim, Bruno. The Uses of Enchantment The
Meaning and Importance of Fairy Tales.
1976. New York Vintage, 1989. 6-7.
5Locating Bibliographic Information
- To locate key bibliographic information, open
your book to its main title page. A detailed
record of publication data will be found on the
back of this page.
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7 Hershberger 1 Works Cited
Bettelheim, Bruno. The Uses of Enchantment
The Meaning and Importance of Fairy
Tales. 1976. New York Vintage,
1989. Sale, Roger. Fairy Tales and After
From Snow White to E.B. White.
Cambridge, Massachussetts Harvard
UP, 1979. 37-8. Zipes, Jack. Dont Bet On
the Prince Contemporary Feminist
Fairy Tales in North America and England.
1987. New York Routledge, 1989.
Note, too, that the first line of each
bibliographic entry is left justified and that
all subsequent lines are indented. This makes it
very easy to see the authors last name.
Note that the title Works Cited is centered, but
it is not underlined, bolded, or in quotation
marks.
No matter what you may have been taught in the
past, Works Cited entries are neither numbered
nor bulleted.
8Non-Book Sources
- There are, of course, specific methods for
citing newspapers, periodicals, magazines,
videos, television programs, films, works of art,
interviews, Web sites, the Internet, maps,
documents, tapes, etc. Our concern today is
books. - Remember, your reference texts outline
appropriate citation methods for all sources and
you should, therefore, familiarize yourself
thoroughly with the MLA section of The Norton
Field Guide to Writing. - Should the Field Guide fail to answer your
questions, the MLA Handbook is available in the
reference section of the Library.
9No normal human being can be expected to remember
all of the ins and outs of MLA styleparticularly
as these evolve over time to embrace new
technologies and needs. When in doubt, turn to
the MLA Handbook, or to your Writers Reference.
10PowerPoint Presentation by Mark A. Spalding, BA,
MEd, MA, 2007.
The End