MLA IN-TEXT DOCUMENTATION
Brief documentation in your text makes clear to your reader what
you took from a source and where in the source you found the
information.
In your text, you have three options for citing a source: quoting,
paraphrasing, and summarizing. As you cite each source, you will
need to decide whether or not to name the author in a signal
phrase—"as Toni Morrison writes"—or in
parentheses—"(Morrison 24)."
The first examples in this chapter show basic in-text citations of
a work by one author. Variations on those examples follow. All of
the examples are color-coded to help you see how writers using MLA
style work
authors and
page numbers—and sometimes
titles—into their texts. The examples also
illustrate the MLA style of using quotation marks around titles of
short works and underlining titles of long works. (Your instructor
may prefer italics to underlining; find out if you're not
sure.)
1. AUTHOR NAMED IN A SIGNAL PHRASE
If you mention the author in a signal phrase, put only the page
number(s) in parentheses. Do not write
page or
p.
McCullough describes John
Adams as having "the hands of a man
accustomed to pruning his
own trees, cutting his own hay, and splitting
his own
firewood" (18).
McCullough describes John Adams's
hands as those of someone used to
manual labor (18).
2. AUTHOR NAMED IN PARENTHESES
If you do not mention the author in a signal phrase, put his or her
last name in parentheses along with the page number(s). Do not use
punctuation between the name and the page number(s).
Adams is said to have had "the hands of a man
accustomed to pruning
his own trees, cutting his own hay, and
splitting his own firewood"
(McCullough 18).
One biographer describes John Adams as someone who was not a
stranger to manual labor (McCullough
18).
Whether you use a signal phrase and parentheses or parentheses
only, try to put the parenthetical citation at the end of the
sentence or as close as possible to the material you've cited
without awkwardly interrupting the sentence. Notice that in the
first example above, the parenthetical reference comes after the
closing quotation marks but before the period at the end of the
sentence.
3. TWO OR MORE WORKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR
If you cite multiple works by one author, you have four choices.
You can mention the author in a signal phrase and give the title
and page reference in parentheses. Give the full title if it's
brief; otherwise, give a short version.
Kaplan insists that
understanding power in the Near East requires
"Western leaders
who know when to intervene, and do so without
illusions"
(Eastward 330).
You can mention both author and title in a signal phrase and give
only the page reference in parentheses.
In Eastward to Tartary,
Kaplan insists that understanding power in
the Near East requires "Western leaders who know when to
intervene, and
do so without illusions" (330).
You can indicate author, title, and page reference only in
parentheses, with a comma between author and title.
Understanding power in the Near East requires
"Western leaders who
know when to intervene, and do so without
illusions" (Kaplan,
Eastward 330).
Or you can mention the title in a signal phrase and give the author
and page reference in parentheses.
Eastward to Tartary
argues that understanding power in the Near East
requires
"Western leaders who know when to intervene, and do so
without
illusions" (Kaplan 330).
4. AUTHORS WITH THE SAME LAST NAME
If your works-cited list includes works by authors with the same
last name, you need to give the author's first name in any
signal phrase or the author's first initial in the
parenthetical reference.
Edmund Wilson uses the broader
term imaginative, whereas Anne
Wilson
chooses the narrower adjective magical.
Imaginative applies not only to modern literature
(E. Wilson) but also to
writing of all
periods, whereas magical is often used in writing about
Arthurian romances (A.
Wilson).
5. AFTER A BLOCK QUOTATION
When quoting more than three lines of poetry, more than four lines
of prose, or dialogue from a drama, set off the quotation from the
rest of your text, indenting it one inch (or ten spaces) from the
left margin. Do not use quotation marks. Place any parenthetical
documentation after the final punctuation.
In Eastward to Tartary,
Kaplan captures ancient and contemporary
Antioch for us:
At the height of its glory in the Roman-Byzantine age,
when
it had an amphitheater, public baths, aqueducts, and
sewage pipes, half a million people lived in Antioch. Today
the population
is only 125,000. With sour relations between
Turkey and Syria, and
unstable politics throughout the
Middle East, Antioch is now a
backwater—seedy and
tumbledown, with relatively few tourists.
I found it altogether charming. (123)
6. TWO OR MORE AUTHORS
For a work by two or three authors, name all the authors, either in
a signal phrase or in the parentheses.
Carlson and Ventura's
stated goal is to introduce Julio Cortázar, Marjorie
Agosín, and
other Latin American writers to an audience of
English-speaking
adolescents (v).
For a work with four or more authors, you have the option of
mentioning all their names or just the name of the first author
followed by
et al., which means "and others."
One popular survey of American literature breaks the
contents into sixteen
thematic groupings (Anderson, Brinnin, Leggett, Arpin, and Toth
A19-24).
One popular survey of American
literature breaks the contents into
sixteen thematic groupings
(Anderson et al. A19-24).
7. ORGANIZATION OR GOVERNMENT AS AUTHOR
If the author is an organization, cite the organization either in a
signal phrase or in parentheses. It's acceptable to shorten
long names.
The U.S. government can be direct when it wants to be.
For example, it
sternly warns, "If you are overpaid, we will
recover any payments not
due you" (Social
Security Administration 12).
8. AUTHOR UNKNOWN
If you don't know the author of a work, as you won't with
many reference books and with most newspaper editorials, use the
work's title or a shortened version of the title in the
parentheses.
The explanatory notes at the front of the literature
encyclopedia point
out that writers known by pseudonyms are listed
alphabetically under
those pseudonyms (Merriam-Webster's vii).
A powerful editorial in last week's paper asserts that healthy
liver donor
Mike Hurewitz died because of "frightening"
faulty postoperative care
("Every
Patient's Nightmare").
9. LITERARY WORKS
When referring to literary works that are available in many
different editions, cite the page numbers from the edition you are
using, followed by information that will let readers of any edition
locate the text you are citing.
NOVELS
Give the page and chapter number.
In Pride and Prejudice,
Mrs. Bennet shows no warmth toward Jane and
Elizabeth when they
return from Netherfield (cit_cit_105; ch. 12).
VERSE PLAYS
Give the act, scene, and line numbers; separate them with periods.
Macbeth continues the vision theme when he addresses
the Ghost with
"Thou hast no speculation in those eyes / Which
thou dost glare with"
(3.3.96-97).
POEMS
Give the part and the line numbers (separated by periods). If a
poem has only line numbers, use the word
line(s) in the first
reference.
Whitman sets up not only
opposing adjectives but also opposing nouns
in "Song of Myself" when he says, "I am of
old and young, of the foolish
as much as the wise, / . . . a child
as well as a man" (16.330-32).
One description of the mere in Beowulf is "not a pleasant place!"
(line
1372). Later, the label is "the
awful place" (1378).
cit_cit_10. WORK IN AN ANTHOLOGY
If you're citing a work that is included in an anthology, name
the author(s) of the work, not the editor of the
anthology—either in a signal phrase or in parentheses.
"It is the teapots that truly shock,"
according to Cynthia Ozick in her
essay on
teapots as metaphor (70).
In In Short: A Collection of Creative
Nonfiction, readers will find both
an essay on Scottish
tea (Hiestand) and a piece on teapots as
metaphors
(Ozick).
11. SACRED TEXT
When citing sacred texts such as the Bible or the Qur'an, give
the title of the edition used, and in parentheses give the book,
chapter, and verse (or their equivalent), separated by periods. MLA
style recommends that you abbreviate the names of the books of the
Bible in parenthetical references.
The wording from The New English
Bible follows: "In the beginning of
creation, when
God made heaven and earth, the earth was without form
and void,
with darkness over the face of the abyss, and a mighty wind
that
swept over the surface of the waters" (Gen.
1.1-2).
12. MULTIVOLUME WORK
If you cite more than one volume of a multivolume work, each time
you cite one of the volumes, give the volume and the page numbers
in parentheses, separated by a colon.
Sandburg concludes with the
following sentence about those paying last
respects to Lincoln:
"All day long and through the night the unbroken
line moved,
the home town having its farewell" (4:
413).
If your works-cited list includes only a single volume of a
multivolume work, the only number you need to give in your
parenthetical reference is the page number.
13. TWO OR MORE WORKS CITED TOGETHER
If you're citing two or more works closely together, you will
sometimes need to provide a parenthetical citation for each one.
Tanner (7) and Smith (viii) have looked at works from a cultural
perspective.
If the citation allows you to include both in the same parentheses,
separate the references with a semicolon.
Critics have looked at both Pride
and Prejudice and Frankenstein from
a cultural perspective
(Tanner 7
Smith viii).
14. SOURCE QUOTED IN ANOTHER SOURCE
When you are quoting text that you found quoted in another source,
use the abbreviation
qtd. in in the parenthetical reference.
Charlotte Brontë wrote to G. H. Lewes: "Why do you
like Miss Austen so
very much? I am puzzled on that point"
(qtd. in Tanner 7).
15. WORK WITHOUT PAGE NUMBERS
For works without page numbers, give paragraph or section numbers,
using the abbreviation
par. or
sec. If you are
including the author's name in the parenthetical reference, add
a comma.
Russell's dismissals from Trinity College at
Cambridge and from City
College in New York City are seen as
examples of the controversy that
marked the philosopher's life
(Irvine, par.
2).
16. AN ENTIRE WORK
If your text is referring to an entire work rather than a part of
it, identify the author in a signal phrase or in parentheses.
There's no need to include page numbers.
Kaplan considers Turkey and
Central Asia explosive.
At least one observer considers Turkey and Central Asia explosive
(Kaplan).