Rev. 9/10 Guidelines for preparing a Works Cited or a Works Consulted in MLA form The main idea behind a citation is to give sufficient information for another researcher to be able to confirm where you found your information. At Niskayuna HS, most classes use Modern Language Association (MLA) rules for formatting. While there are specific rules for different formats (i.e., books, magazine articles, web pages) there are some rules that are the same for all. 1. Titles of complete works should be italicized. 2. Titles of a smaller portion of a work (i.e. a short story in a collection, a magazine article or an encyclopedia article) should be placed in quotations. 3. All significant words in a title are capitalized - words like “a”, “an” are not capitalized unless the are the first word of the title or the first word in a subtitle. 4. Use the first US city for the place of publication if more than one is listed. 5. States are not needed in place of publication if it is a major city. 6. Words such as “press”, “books” and “publisher” are left off the publisher names. 7. Pages are just numbers, no added “p”. If the article continues on non-consecutive pages it is noted with the first page and a “+”. 8. The first line should come over to the left margin while the second or later lines should be indented. (The easiest way to do this is type them straight, then go into Format and Paragraph and choose Indentation: Special: Hanging when done.) 9. The entire Works Cited page should be double-spaced and alphabetized - no skipping lines between entries. 10. Author names at the beginning of an entry are always last name first, names within entries are standard order. 11. Designate the type of source you used, either Print or Web. The basic format for printed sources is: Last Name, First Name. “Article Title.” Work Title. Ed. First Name Last Name. Place of Publication: Publisher, Copyright. Pages. Print. Some citations will not have all elements. Use the guides below for some more specific examples. Book Leapman, Michael. Amphibians and Reptiles. New York: Dorling Kindersley, 2000. Print. Book with two authors Parker, Oren W., and Craig R. Wolf. Scene Design and Stage Lighting. 6th ed. Fort Worth, TX: Holt, 1990. 3-4. Print. Article in a Reference Book (missing author) "Zeus.” Guide to the Gods. Eds. Michael Owen Jones and Frances Cattermole-Tally. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, 1992. Print Magazines and newspapers have a few different rules. 1. There is not a period after the title of the magazine. 2. Days of the month are placed before the month. The basic form looks like: Last Name, First Name. “Article Title.” Magazine Title Issue date: Pages. Print. Magazine Article Shelton, Linda. "The Beginner's Guide to Yoga." Shape Feb. 2003: 96-100. Print. This handout is based on the MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers: 7th edition Rev. 9/10 Newspaper or Newswire Article Frett, Mona. "Hudson River Clean-up Unfinished." Times-Union [Albany, NY] 18 Aug. 1999: 1B. Print. If you access a newspaper or magazine article from a subscription source like EBSCO or Gale you must include the database you accessed it from as well as the date you accessed it. Magazine Article from a subscription database (EBSCO, Lexis-Nexis, etc.) Covington, Richard. "Sacred and Profaned." Smithsonian Dec. 2002: 80+. MasterFILE Select. EBSCOhost. Web. 5 Oct. 2005. When you access information from the Internet may you need to add more parts to your citations: 1.The date the material was put on the web page, if not dated, put n.d. for no date. 2. You must put the word Web. After this date for anything found on the internet. 3.You must list when you accessed the page, since pages change frequently. This date follows the word “web.” 4.Your teacher may require the URL (Uniform Resource Locator) if so it goes last and should be enclosed in angle brackets <http://www.mla.org>. eBook from Gale Virtual Reference Library McGrath, Kimberly A., and Stacey Blachford, Eds. Gale Encyclopedia of Science. 4th ed. Detroit: Gale Group, 2008. Gale Virtual Reference Library. Gale. Web. 10 Dec. 2008. Web page “The Owls of Harry Potter.” The Nature Conservancy. N.d. Web. 5 Oct. 2005 Painting/Sculpture/Photograph from a collection on-line Renoir, Auguste. A Girl with a Watering Can. 1876. National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC. n.d. Web. 3 Oct. 2005. Video or Movie from the Internet T. Rex Movie. The Natural History Museum. The Life Galleries - Dinosaurs. London. n.d. Web. 5 Oct. 2005. Multimedia sources (videos, CDs, DVDs) need to be noted as such in their citation. Song Jones, Norah. “I’ve Got to See You Again.” Comp. Jesse Harris, Prod. Arif Mardin. Come Away with Me. CD. Blue Note, 2002. Video/DVD/Movie Islam: Empire of Faith. Prod. and Dir. Robert Gardner. Perf. Ben Kingsley. Videocassette. PBS Video, 2000. Interview (if via telephone substitute “Telephone” for “Personal” below) Lee, Thomas A. Personal interview. 29 Sep. 2005. Use the “If You Didn’t Think it up..Who Did?” handout from English for more samples. See Mrs. Stahl if you have more questions. This handout is based on the MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers: 7th edition