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V. Creating a Works Cited Page
It is not an easy task to create
a correctly formatted Works Cited page.
Pat will give herself a lot of time to do it!
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Table of Contents
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3.
4.
5.
6.
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10.
MLA Format
Example of a Works Cited Page
General Rules for Works Cited Entries
Works Cited Entry: Book
Works Cited Entry: Periodical
Works Cited Entry: Gale Literary Criticism Series
General Rules for Web Sources
Works Cited Entry: Web site
Additional Research Sources/Information
Pat’s Next Step: Using Quotations
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Unit VI
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What is MLA format?
My professor says
I need to use MLA
format when
creating a Works
Cited page.
What is that?
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MLA Format
• MLA stands for Modern Language Association.
• MLA format, developed by the Modern Language
Association, provides the style (page layout of the
essay, header, quotations, Works Cited, etc.) most
instructors in the humanities require for papers.
• However, there are other formats such as APA
(American Psychological Association) or the Chicago
Manual of Style. Each format has its own set of
rules. For papers in literature you must use MLA
format.
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Rules for MLA Format
• The bibliography is called “Works Cited.”
• Double space everything on a Works Cited page.
• Center the title Works Cited (no bold, italics, or
underlining) and place it at the top of the page.
• Use a “hanging indent” after the first line of each
entry.
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OK: so what does it
look like?
Works Cited
Centered
Title
Berman, Jeffrey. “The Unrestful Cure: Charlotte Perkins Gilman and ‘The
Yellow Wallpaper’.” The Talking Cure: Literary Representations of
Psychoanalysis. By Jeffrey Berman. New York: New York University
“Hanging”
Indent
Press, 1985. 33-59. Rpt. in Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism. Ed.
All text is
Paula Kepos. Vol. 37. Detroit: The Gale Group, 1991. 198-200.
doubleGilman, Charlotte Perkins. “The Yellow Wall-paper.” The YellowW spaced,
Other and
there are no
Stories. New York: Modern Library, 2000. Print.
line spaces
between
entries.
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More Rules for Works Cited
• The author’s last name is usually first in a Works Cited
entry, followed by the source title(s) and publication
information.
• Place the titles of articles, short stories, book chapters,
poems, and songs in quotation marks.
• Italicize the titles of books, plays, journals, magazines,
newspapers, and films.
• Capitalize each word in titles, except articles, short
prepositions, or conjunctions.
• Include publication medium (Print or Web) in each
citation.
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Works Cited Entry for a Book
In-text Citation
Elaine Showalter would disagree with the
interpretation of the demonized baby that
poses a threat to the mother, “in particular
the weight gain that was considered an
essential part of the cure was a kind of
pseudo-pregnancy” (247).
Wow! Look
at the
connection!
Works Cited Entry
Works Cited
Showalter, Elaine. A Literature of Their Own. Princeton: Princeton
University Press, 1998. Print.
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Works Cited Entry for a
Periodical Article from a Database
In-text Citation
Jonathan Crewe claims that “the exasperating effect of pattern wallpaper on
invalids was a medical commonplace of Gilman’s time” (qtd. in Roth).
Works Cited Entry
Roth, Marty. “Gilman’s Arabesque Wallpaper.” Mosaic 34.4 (2001)
145-163. Literature Resource Center. Thomson Gale. Web.
27 June 2006.
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Works Cited Entries for the
Gale Literary Criticism Series
Follow the examples below to cite material from the Gale Literary Criticism
Series. The first example shows how to cite material originally published in
an article; the second illustrates how to cite material reprinted from books:
Treichler, Paula A. “Escaping the Sentence: Diagnosis and Discourse in ‘The Yellow
Wallpaper’.” Tulsa Studies in Women’s Literature 3.1-2 (1984): 61-77. Rpt. in
Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism. Ed. Paula Kepos. Vol. 37. Detroit: The Gale
Group, 1991. 188-194. Print.
Hedges, Elaine R. “Afterword.” The Yellow Wallpaper. By Charlotte Perkins Gilman.
1973. New York: The Feminist Press, 1973. 37-63. Rpt. in TwentiethCentury Literary Criticism. Ed. Dennis Poupard. Vol. 9. Detroit: The Gale
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Group, 1983. 105-107. Print.
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Rules for Web Sources in Works Cited
• All Web sources need two dates: the date that the
Web page was last updated and the date the
information was accessed from the Internet.
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Works Cited Entry for a Web Site
In-text Citation
Deborah Thomas notes that in Charlotte Gilman’s view, “women were
constricted to the set parameters that men determined. . .[and] conditioned to
accept these boundaries and remain in place, in the private sphere.”
Works Cited Entry
Thomas, Deborah. “The Changing Role of Womanhood: From True Woman to
New Woman in Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s ‘The Yellow Wallpaper’.”
American Literature Research and Analysis Web Site. Florida Gulf Coast
University. September 1997. Web. 26 June 2006.
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Additional Research Sources
• Lecture or Speech
• Chapter in a Book
• Newspapers
• Interview
Hmm… what
if I am using
something
else as a
research
source? Yes,
something
like this…
• Television or Film
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For More Information
Visit the Purdue Online Writing Lab for more
information about formatting various Works
Cited entries in MLA format at
http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/print/re
search/r_mla.html.
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Now I need to learn
how to use the
information from my
sources in my paper.
How can I use
quotations and avoid
plagiarism?
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