MLA. STYLE.
The following are sample entries for the most commonly used types of sources. If you have a source not covered here, consult the complete MLA handbook.
EXAMPLES
BOOKS
Citation entries for books generally list three main sections for information about your source:
Each of these sections is followed by a period and two spaces.
I. A Book by a Single Author:
Light, Paul C. Forging Legislation. New York: Norton, 1992.
Fairbanks, Carol. Prairie Women: Images in American and
Canadian Fiction. New Haven: Yale UP, 1986.
II. An Anthology:
Allen, Robert C., ed. Channels of Discourse: Television and
Contemporary Criticism. Chapel Hill: U of North
Carolina P, 1987.
Note that in all three of these entries
III. A Book by Two or More Persons:
Berry, Jason, Jonathan Foose, and Tad Jones. Up from the
Cradle of Jazz: New Orleans Music since World War II.
Athens: U of Georgia P, 1986.
Note here that only the FIRST author’s name is inverted; the rest in the list are in regular order.
IV. An Anonymous Book:
Encyclopedia of Photography. New York: Crown, 1984.
V. A Work in an Anthology:
Since articles are only a part of a larger work, you must also provide your reader with page numbers. The numbers should be for the whole article, not just for the pages you have used.
Hansberry, Lorraine. A Raisin in the Sun. Black Theater: A
20th Century Collection of the Work of Its Best
Playwrights. Ed. Lindsay Patterson. New York: Dodd,
1971. 221-76.
Note that the title of the play, A Raisin in the Sun, is underlined or italicized (as all play titles are), as is the title of the anthology. “Works Cited” pages follow regular rules of capitalization, underlining, and quotation marks for titles.
Lazard, Naomi. “In Answer to Your Query.” The Norton Book
of Light Verse. Ed. Russell Baker. New York: Norton,
1986. 52-53.
ARTICLES IN NEWSPAPERS AND PERIODICALS
Citation entries for newspapers and periodicals generally list three main sections of information about your source:
Each of these sections is followed by a period and two spaces.
I. A Newspaper Article:
Fowler, Jennifer Jill. “Hilly Hundred Tour Called ’the best
ever.’” Bloomington Herald-Times 12 Oct. 1992: A1.
Wheeler, David L. “Artificial-Intelligence Researchers
Develop Electronic ’Tutors’ to Aid Learning Process.”
Chronicle of Higher Education 20 May 1987: 6-8.
II. A Letter to the Editor:
Identify letters by adding the description, “Letter,” after the name of the author. Do not underline the work or put it in quotation marks.
III. An Article from a Magazine:
A. a magazine published weekly or every two weeks:
Prince, Dinah. “Marriage in the ’80s.” New York 1 June
1987: 30-38.
Note that this entry gives the full date. Do not include volume and issue numbers.
B. a magazine published every month or two months:
Frazer, Lance. “Yours, Mine, or Ours: Who Owns the Moon?”
Space World Nov. 1986: 24-26.
This entry states only the month. Again, you should not include issue or volume numbers in your citation.
Abbreviate the names of months so that they take up three spaces plus a period, e.g., Aug. The following months may be spelled out: May, June, and July.
IV. An Article in a Scholarly Journal:
A. a journal that pages each issue separately:
Barthelme, Frederick. “Architecture.” Kansas Quarterly
13.3 (1981): 77-80.
Note that this entry provides the volume number (13) and issue number (3) separated by a period and followed by the year.
B. a journal with continuous pagination: (i.e., the numbers in one issue begin where the preceding issue left off):
Brock, Dan W. “The Value of Prolonging Human Life.”
Philosophical Studies 50 (1986): 401-26.
Note that this entry supplies the volume number (50) before the year.
V. An Anonymous Article:
If no author is given for an article, begin with the title and alphabetize the title.
“Drunkproofing Automobiles.” Time 6 Apr. 1987: 37.
VI. An Article With a Title That Contains a Quotation or a Title Within Quotation Marks:
Carrier, Warren. “Deconstructing Keats’s ’Ode on a Grecian
Urn.’” Critical Thought 28 (1992): 35-58.