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MLA Documentation
     Tutorial


How to Cite Using MLA Style
What Will this Tutorial Cover?
   How and when to cite within your
    text according to the MLA style
   How to create a Works Cited page,
    citing a variety of sources:
       Print
       Electronic
       Media
   What to do if you come across
    something unusual not covered in
    this tutorial
What is MLA?
MLA stands for Modern
Language Association which
promulgates guidelines for
preparing student research
papers and projects and
scholarly manuscripts in the
humanities. “MLA style” refers
to a system of citing research
sources.
Why Should I Cite?
Citing identifies and credits sources used in a research
   paper or project, acknowledging their role in shaping
   your research. This also allows others to follow-up on or
   retrieve this material.
When you borrow from other sources to support your
   argument or research you must give proper credit. By
   crediting your sources, you avoid plagiarism. If you do
   not cite a source, you are guilty of plagiarism.

Plagiarism is a form of cheating or stealing. It is the
  unacknowledged use or appropriation of another
  person‟s words or ideas.
When Should I Cite?
                           When in doubt, give
                           credit to your source!
Many students plagiarize
  unintentionally. Remember,
                                              My mother always
  whenever you summarize,
                                              said, “Make your bed”
  paraphrase or quote another                   (Mom 12).
  author's material you must
  properly credit your source.

If you are using another person‟s
    idea, you must also cite your
    source!
In any of these cases, you must credit your source


    Summary, Paraphrase, Quote
   A summary (aka „abstract‟) briefly captures the main
    ideas of your source
   A paraphrase is a restatement of the text of your source
    in your own words
   Quotations can be direct (using quotation marks) or
    indirect (no quotation marks and often introduced by
    „that‟)
       A noted scientist states, “A hundred years ago, the average
        temperature of the earth was about 13.7 C (56.5 F); today, it is
        closer to 14.4 C (57.9 F)” (Silver 11).
       A noted scientist observes that the earth‟s current average
        temperature is 57.9 F compared to 56.5 F a hundred years ago
        (Silver 11).
How Do I Cite?
There are two parts to citing according to MLA
  style:

1. Brief In-text citations (in parentheses) within the body of
   your essay or paper

2. List of full citations in the Works Cited page at the end of
   your paper

Note:
  References cited in the text must appear in the Works
      Cited.
  Conversely, each entry in the Works Cited must be cited
      in the text.
MLA provides these
        guidelines for citations:
In-text:
“References in the text must clearly point to
  specific sources in the list of works cited”
  (Gibaldi 214).
Works Cited:
“Identify the location of the borrowed
  information as specifically as possible”
  (Gibaldi 215).
In-Text Citations
              You must provide information that will
              allow the reader to locate exactly where
              you found information in your sources.
              Usually this is the author's last name and
              a page number, for example: (Polar 188)

Place the parenthetical reference at the end of
  the sentence before the punctuation mark.
    The average world temperature is rising at
     an alarming rate of 200 degrees Celsius
     per year (Polar 188).
In-Text Citations, Continued
If you use an author's name in a sentence (known as a
    “signal phrase”), do not use it again in the parenthetical
    citation. Simply give the page numbers:
      Polar argues that global warming will help heat our
        jacuzzis (122).
If there is no known author, use the title and page number in
    your citation:
      A single car trip from Los Angeles to San Francisco
        produces more pollution than a tree does in its entire
        lifetime (Save My Greenhouse 47).
Other Citation Possibilities
More than one page:                  When possible, give only the last
  Smith states some interesting facts aboutfor the second number
                                     two digits the changing

  world temperature (123-25).
Citing two (page) locations from your source:
  Jones alludes to this premise (136-39, as you normally would and
                                       Cite 145).
                                       separate citations with a semicolon
Two works cited:
  (Taylor 54; Thomas 327)
When you cite more than one work by the same author
  in your paper, indicate which work in your
  parenthetical citation:
  Everyone hates global warming (Smith, Our Environment
                                   Author Comma Title Page Number
In-Text Citations-
               Electronic Sources
If possible, electronic and online sources are cited just like
    print resources in parenthetical references.
Often electronic resources will not have page numbers. In
    these cases omit numbers from the parenthetical
    reference:
       (Smith) – the author‟s last name
       (“Bovine Flatulence A Major Source of Greenhouse
       Gases”) – if no author
Works Cited Page
The Works Cited Page appears at the end of
  your paper on its own page.
Everything you referenced in your text must be
  listed in your Works Cited page.
  Conversely, everything you list in the Works
  Cited page must be cited in your essay.
The Works Cited page provides the
  information needed for a reader to find and
  retrieve any source used in your paper.
Sample Works Cited Page
 *Sources are listed alphabetically   Title “Works Cited” is centered
                                      at the top of the page


Indent all lines after                           Be sure that each
the first ½ inch for                                citation has a
each work listed                                 format descriptor
                                                  (properly placed
                                                      within the
                                                   citation); e.g.,
                                                  Web, Print, Film
 *The entire
 Works Cited
 page is
 double-spaced
                                                  All citations end
                                                   in a period (.)
Most Citations Will Include:
                                    For a book, most of this information
      Author                       can be found on the title page and
                                    obverse of the title page.
      Title
      Publication information
      Format descriptor
Last Name, First Period           Italicized Title


   Gore, Albert. An Inconvenient Truth: The Crisis of Global
                                                      Period
                                                               Format descriptor
       Warming. New York: Viking, 2007. Print.
                                                                Period
                                                     Year
Period
                 City     Colon   Publisher Comma
General Tips:
                     Print Resources
Book titles are italicized:
         An Inconvenient Truth: The Crisis of Global Warming

Article titles and titles of chapters, essays and short stories appear in
   quotes:
          "The Scientific Case for Modern Anthropogenic Global
   Warming."

If more than one author is given, list first author‟s “Last Name, First.”
    The second or third authors should be listed “First Name Last
    Name” with “and” connecting the last name:
     Singer, Fred S., Christopher Hogwood, and Dennis T. Avery.
Books
        What Should Be Included?


Author(s) or Editor(s).   Gore, Albert.
Complete title.           An Inconvenient Truth: The Crisis
                            of Global Warming.
Edition (if indicated).
Place of publication:     New York           If several cities
                                             are listed, give
Publisher,                Viking             only the first

Date of publication.      2007.
Format descriptor.        Print.
Book Examples
                         Italicize title of book
   With one author:                                        Use a colon between the
                                                           main title and the subtitle
   Gore, Albert. An Inconvenient Truth: The Crisis of Global Warming.

     New York: Viking, 2007. Print.
                                 List the first author Last Name, First,
   With two to three authors:    but the second First Name then Last.

   Singer, S. Fred and Dennis T. Avery. Unstoppable Global Warming:

      Every 1,500 Years. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2008. Print.

Remember to indent                             Postal codes for states of
the second line ½ inch                           lesser-known cities
Books, Continued
                                   For books with editors, list the editor‟(s)
                                   name(s) followed by “eds.”
Editors as authors:

Schmandt, Jurgen and Judith Clarkson, eds. The Regions and Global

  Warming: Impacts and Response Strategies. New York: Oxford

  University Press, 1992. Print.
                                   Cite a book by corporate author
Book by a corporate author:

National Research Council. China and Global Change: Opportunities

  for Collaboration. Washington: Natl. Acad., 1992. Print.
Two or More Sources by the
          Same Author:
Firor, John. The Changing Atmosphere: A Global Challenge.

  New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2009. Print.

---. The Crowded Greenhouse: Population, Climate change,

  and Creating a Sustainable World. New Haven, CT: Yale

  University Press, 2002. Print.

                  For the second listing by the same author, type
                  three hyphens and a period in place of the name.
Periodical Articles
        What Should Be Included?
Depends on the type of       Author(s).
  periodical: Newspaper,     Article title in quotes.
  Magazine, or Journal       Periodical title (journal,
But they generally require     magazine, etc.)
  this information             italicized.
                             Volume #.Issue #
                             Publication date
                               (abbreviate months, if
                               used):
                             Page numbers of the
                               article.
                             Format descriptor.
What Should Be Included?
            Journal Articles
                             Farley, John W.
Author(s).
Article Title in Quotes      "The Scientific Case for Modern
                                Anthropogenic Global Warming."
Periodical Title (journal,
  magazine, etc.)            Monthly Review
  Italicized.
Volume #.Issue #             60.3
Publication Date
  (abbreviate months, if     (2008):
  used):
Page Numbers of the          68-90.
  Article.
Format.                      Print.
Articles
Journal:                                                          Article title in quotes
Farley, John W. "The Scientific Case for Modern Anthropogenic Global Warming." Monthly Review

    60.3 (2008): 68-90. Print.
                                                           Italicize the name of the
Magazine:               Volume 60 Issue 3                   journal, magazine or newspaper
Manthorpe, Catherine. "Feminists Look at Science." New Scientist 7 Mar. 1985: 29-31. Print.
                                                        If available give complete
Newspaper:
                                                        date: day, month and year
Tilgham, Shirley M. "Science vs. Women--A Radical Solution." New York Times 26 Jan. 1993, late ed.:

    F1+. Print.



       If a newspaper article continues on another page,
       write only the first page number and a plus sign
General Tips
          Electronic Resources
Dates: It is very important that you always include
  the date you accessed the electronic or online
  source. You should also include the date the
  source was published or last updated.
Database: Indicate the name of the database, like
  ProQuest or LexisNexis, italics.
Format descriptor: Indicate that it‟s a web source
  with the word, Web.
Internet Sources
         What Should Be Included?

Author(s), if available:
Title of the document.        “Global Warming.”
Title of scholarly project,
   database, periodical, or   Stanford Solar Center.
   website.
Date electronic publication
   was last updated.          2008.
Name of the organization
   sponsoring or associated   Stanford University.
   with the site.
Format descriptor.            Web.
Date when you accessed
   the source.                4 Apr. 2010
Websites

Climate Change. 24 Jul 2008. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

   Web. 4 Apr. 2010.

        Date accessed          Date source was last updated
        Abbreviate the month
“Global Warming.” Stanford Solar Center. 2008. Stanford University.

   Web. 4 Apr. 2010.
Electronic Articles
Journal:

Laurance, William F. "Can Carbon Trading Save

  Vanishing Forests?" Bioscience 58.4 (2008): 286-

  87. ProQuest. Web. 4 Apr. 2010.           Volume #.Issue#
                                          (Year of publication)


                            Access date
     Database, italicized
Electronic Articles, Continued

Newspaper:

Ball, Jeffrey N. “Warming Program Draws Fire; Fund Designed to Spur

  Renewable Energy Subsidizes Gas Plants." Wall Street

  Journal [New York, N.Y.] 11 Jul 2008, Eastern edition: A.1. Web. 4

  Apr. 2010.
                      Date article was published
                                                            Format descriptor
     Date of access
                            Place of publication is in brackets when it is not
                               explicitly indicated in the publication itself
Electronic Books
Sweet, William. Kicking the Carbon Habit: Global Warming and the Case for Renewable

   and Nuclear Energy. New York: Columbia University Press, 2006. NetLibrary. Web.

   4 Apr. 2010.
                                    “University Press” can be abbreviated “UP”


  Again, include date of access and format descriptor

Moser, Susanne C. Creating a Climate for Change: Communicating Climate Change

   and Facilitating Social Change. Cambridge, New York: Cambridge UP, 2007.

   NetLibrary. Web. 4 Aug. 2010.
Media Sources

     Multimedia sources can also be used
                  and cited

Media sources (examples):        Format descriptors:
•TV & radio broadcasts      •Television; Radio
•Films & video recordings   •Film; DVD; Video Recording
•Sound recordings           •CD; Sound Recording
Media Sources
         What Should Be Included?

   “Title of The Episode.”     “The Yada Yada”
   Title of program or         Seinfeld
    series.
                                Perf. Elaine Benes,
   Name(s) of director(s),     George Constanza,
    performer(s), narrator(s)   Cosmo Kramer, and
   Name of Network.            Jerry Seinfeld
   Call Letters and City of    National Broadcasting
    Station.                    Corp.
   DD MMM. YYYY.               KNBC, Los Angeles
   Format descriptor           24 Apr. 1997
                                Television.
Works Cited
Badu, Eryka. “Rimshot.” Eryka Badu Live. Universal Records. 1997.
       CD.

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. Dir. Niels Arden Oplev. Perf. Noomi
        Rapace and Michael Nyquist. Music Box. 2009. Film.

Joyce, James. Ulysses. Perf. Jim Norton and Marcella Riordan. Naxos
        Audiobooks. 2004. CD.

“The Yada Yada.” Seinfeld. Perf. Elaine Benes, George Constanza,
       Cosmo Kramer, and Jerry Seinfeld. National Broadcasting
       Corp. KNBC, Los Angeles, 24 Apr. 1997. Television.
The MLA „Bible‟
If you come across
anything not
mentioned in this
presentation or need
further information,
consult the MLA
Handbook
in the library!
                                     There are many more examples
                                    and much useful information inside!

Gibaldi, Joseph. MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers.
         7th ed. New York: Modern Language Association of
         America, 2009. Print.
Trimmer, Joseph F. A Guide to MLA Documentation: with an
         Appendix to APA Style. 8th ed. Boston: Wadsworth, 2010.
         Print.

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Mla documentation module 7th ed

  • 1. MLA Documentation Tutorial How to Cite Using MLA Style
  • 2. What Will this Tutorial Cover?  How and when to cite within your text according to the MLA style  How to create a Works Cited page, citing a variety of sources:  Print  Electronic  Media  What to do if you come across something unusual not covered in this tutorial
  • 3. What is MLA? MLA stands for Modern Language Association which promulgates guidelines for preparing student research papers and projects and scholarly manuscripts in the humanities. “MLA style” refers to a system of citing research sources.
  • 4. Why Should I Cite? Citing identifies and credits sources used in a research paper or project, acknowledging their role in shaping your research. This also allows others to follow-up on or retrieve this material. When you borrow from other sources to support your argument or research you must give proper credit. By crediting your sources, you avoid plagiarism. If you do not cite a source, you are guilty of plagiarism. Plagiarism is a form of cheating or stealing. It is the unacknowledged use or appropriation of another person‟s words or ideas.
  • 5. When Should I Cite? When in doubt, give credit to your source! Many students plagiarize unintentionally. Remember, My mother always whenever you summarize, said, “Make your bed” paraphrase or quote another (Mom 12). author's material you must properly credit your source. If you are using another person‟s idea, you must also cite your source!
  • 6. In any of these cases, you must credit your source Summary, Paraphrase, Quote  A summary (aka „abstract‟) briefly captures the main ideas of your source  A paraphrase is a restatement of the text of your source in your own words  Quotations can be direct (using quotation marks) or indirect (no quotation marks and often introduced by „that‟)  A noted scientist states, “A hundred years ago, the average temperature of the earth was about 13.7 C (56.5 F); today, it is closer to 14.4 C (57.9 F)” (Silver 11).  A noted scientist observes that the earth‟s current average temperature is 57.9 F compared to 56.5 F a hundred years ago (Silver 11).
  • 7. How Do I Cite? There are two parts to citing according to MLA style: 1. Brief In-text citations (in parentheses) within the body of your essay or paper 2. List of full citations in the Works Cited page at the end of your paper Note: References cited in the text must appear in the Works Cited. Conversely, each entry in the Works Cited must be cited in the text.
  • 8. MLA provides these guidelines for citations: In-text: “References in the text must clearly point to specific sources in the list of works cited” (Gibaldi 214). Works Cited: “Identify the location of the borrowed information as specifically as possible” (Gibaldi 215).
  • 9. In-Text Citations You must provide information that will allow the reader to locate exactly where you found information in your sources. Usually this is the author's last name and a page number, for example: (Polar 188) Place the parenthetical reference at the end of the sentence before the punctuation mark.  The average world temperature is rising at an alarming rate of 200 degrees Celsius per year (Polar 188).
  • 10. In-Text Citations, Continued If you use an author's name in a sentence (known as a “signal phrase”), do not use it again in the parenthetical citation. Simply give the page numbers:  Polar argues that global warming will help heat our jacuzzis (122). If there is no known author, use the title and page number in your citation:  A single car trip from Los Angeles to San Francisco produces more pollution than a tree does in its entire lifetime (Save My Greenhouse 47).
  • 11. Other Citation Possibilities More than one page: When possible, give only the last Smith states some interesting facts aboutfor the second number two digits the changing world temperature (123-25). Citing two (page) locations from your source: Jones alludes to this premise (136-39, as you normally would and Cite 145). separate citations with a semicolon Two works cited: (Taylor 54; Thomas 327) When you cite more than one work by the same author in your paper, indicate which work in your parenthetical citation: Everyone hates global warming (Smith, Our Environment Author Comma Title Page Number
  • 12. In-Text Citations- Electronic Sources If possible, electronic and online sources are cited just like print resources in parenthetical references. Often electronic resources will not have page numbers. In these cases omit numbers from the parenthetical reference: (Smith) – the author‟s last name (“Bovine Flatulence A Major Source of Greenhouse Gases”) – if no author
  • 13. Works Cited Page The Works Cited Page appears at the end of your paper on its own page. Everything you referenced in your text must be listed in your Works Cited page. Conversely, everything you list in the Works Cited page must be cited in your essay. The Works Cited page provides the information needed for a reader to find and retrieve any source used in your paper.
  • 14. Sample Works Cited Page *Sources are listed alphabetically Title “Works Cited” is centered at the top of the page Indent all lines after Be sure that each the first ½ inch for citation has a each work listed format descriptor (properly placed within the citation); e.g., Web, Print, Film *The entire Works Cited page is double-spaced All citations end in a period (.)
  • 15. Most Citations Will Include: For a book, most of this information  Author can be found on the title page and obverse of the title page.  Title  Publication information  Format descriptor Last Name, First Period Italicized Title Gore, Albert. An Inconvenient Truth: The Crisis of Global Period Format descriptor Warming. New York: Viking, 2007. Print. Period Year Period City Colon Publisher Comma
  • 16. General Tips: Print Resources Book titles are italicized: An Inconvenient Truth: The Crisis of Global Warming Article titles and titles of chapters, essays and short stories appear in quotes: "The Scientific Case for Modern Anthropogenic Global Warming." If more than one author is given, list first author‟s “Last Name, First.” The second or third authors should be listed “First Name Last Name” with “and” connecting the last name: Singer, Fred S., Christopher Hogwood, and Dennis T. Avery.
  • 17. Books What Should Be Included? Author(s) or Editor(s). Gore, Albert. Complete title. An Inconvenient Truth: The Crisis of Global Warming. Edition (if indicated). Place of publication: New York If several cities are listed, give Publisher, Viking only the first Date of publication. 2007. Format descriptor. Print.
  • 18. Book Examples Italicize title of book With one author: Use a colon between the main title and the subtitle Gore, Albert. An Inconvenient Truth: The Crisis of Global Warming. New York: Viking, 2007. Print. List the first author Last Name, First, With two to three authors: but the second First Name then Last. Singer, S. Fred and Dennis T. Avery. Unstoppable Global Warming: Every 1,500 Years. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2008. Print. Remember to indent Postal codes for states of the second line ½ inch lesser-known cities
  • 19. Books, Continued For books with editors, list the editor‟(s) name(s) followed by “eds.” Editors as authors: Schmandt, Jurgen and Judith Clarkson, eds. The Regions and Global Warming: Impacts and Response Strategies. New York: Oxford University Press, 1992. Print. Cite a book by corporate author Book by a corporate author: National Research Council. China and Global Change: Opportunities for Collaboration. Washington: Natl. Acad., 1992. Print.
  • 20. Two or More Sources by the Same Author: Firor, John. The Changing Atmosphere: A Global Challenge. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2009. Print. ---. The Crowded Greenhouse: Population, Climate change, and Creating a Sustainable World. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2002. Print. For the second listing by the same author, type three hyphens and a period in place of the name.
  • 21. Periodical Articles What Should Be Included? Depends on the type of Author(s). periodical: Newspaper, Article title in quotes. Magazine, or Journal Periodical title (journal, But they generally require magazine, etc.) this information italicized. Volume #.Issue # Publication date (abbreviate months, if used): Page numbers of the article. Format descriptor.
  • 22. What Should Be Included? Journal Articles Farley, John W. Author(s). Article Title in Quotes "The Scientific Case for Modern Anthropogenic Global Warming." Periodical Title (journal, magazine, etc.) Monthly Review Italicized. Volume #.Issue # 60.3 Publication Date (abbreviate months, if (2008): used): Page Numbers of the 68-90. Article. Format. Print.
  • 23. Articles Journal: Article title in quotes Farley, John W. "The Scientific Case for Modern Anthropogenic Global Warming." Monthly Review 60.3 (2008): 68-90. Print. Italicize the name of the Magazine: Volume 60 Issue 3 journal, magazine or newspaper Manthorpe, Catherine. "Feminists Look at Science." New Scientist 7 Mar. 1985: 29-31. Print. If available give complete Newspaper: date: day, month and year Tilgham, Shirley M. "Science vs. Women--A Radical Solution." New York Times 26 Jan. 1993, late ed.: F1+. Print. If a newspaper article continues on another page, write only the first page number and a plus sign
  • 24. General Tips Electronic Resources Dates: It is very important that you always include the date you accessed the electronic or online source. You should also include the date the source was published or last updated. Database: Indicate the name of the database, like ProQuest or LexisNexis, italics. Format descriptor: Indicate that it‟s a web source with the word, Web.
  • 25. Internet Sources What Should Be Included? Author(s), if available: Title of the document. “Global Warming.” Title of scholarly project, database, periodical, or Stanford Solar Center. website. Date electronic publication was last updated. 2008. Name of the organization sponsoring or associated Stanford University. with the site. Format descriptor. Web. Date when you accessed the source. 4 Apr. 2010
  • 26. Websites Climate Change. 24 Jul 2008. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Web. 4 Apr. 2010. Date accessed Date source was last updated Abbreviate the month “Global Warming.” Stanford Solar Center. 2008. Stanford University. Web. 4 Apr. 2010.
  • 27. Electronic Articles Journal: Laurance, William F. "Can Carbon Trading Save Vanishing Forests?" Bioscience 58.4 (2008): 286- 87. ProQuest. Web. 4 Apr. 2010. Volume #.Issue# (Year of publication) Access date Database, italicized
  • 28. Electronic Articles, Continued Newspaper: Ball, Jeffrey N. “Warming Program Draws Fire; Fund Designed to Spur Renewable Energy Subsidizes Gas Plants." Wall Street Journal [New York, N.Y.] 11 Jul 2008, Eastern edition: A.1. Web. 4 Apr. 2010. Date article was published Format descriptor Date of access Place of publication is in brackets when it is not explicitly indicated in the publication itself
  • 29. Electronic Books Sweet, William. Kicking the Carbon Habit: Global Warming and the Case for Renewable and Nuclear Energy. New York: Columbia University Press, 2006. NetLibrary. Web. 4 Apr. 2010. “University Press” can be abbreviated “UP” Again, include date of access and format descriptor Moser, Susanne C. Creating a Climate for Change: Communicating Climate Change and Facilitating Social Change. Cambridge, New York: Cambridge UP, 2007. NetLibrary. Web. 4 Aug. 2010.
  • 30. Media Sources Multimedia sources can also be used and cited Media sources (examples): Format descriptors: •TV & radio broadcasts •Television; Radio •Films & video recordings •Film; DVD; Video Recording •Sound recordings •CD; Sound Recording
  • 31. Media Sources What Should Be Included?  “Title of The Episode.” “The Yada Yada”  Title of program or Seinfeld series. Perf. Elaine Benes,  Name(s) of director(s), George Constanza, performer(s), narrator(s) Cosmo Kramer, and  Name of Network. Jerry Seinfeld  Call Letters and City of National Broadcasting Station. Corp.  DD MMM. YYYY. KNBC, Los Angeles  Format descriptor 24 Apr. 1997 Television.
  • 32. Works Cited Badu, Eryka. “Rimshot.” Eryka Badu Live. Universal Records. 1997. CD. The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. Dir. Niels Arden Oplev. Perf. Noomi Rapace and Michael Nyquist. Music Box. 2009. Film. Joyce, James. Ulysses. Perf. Jim Norton and Marcella Riordan. Naxos Audiobooks. 2004. CD. “The Yada Yada.” Seinfeld. Perf. Elaine Benes, George Constanza, Cosmo Kramer, and Jerry Seinfeld. National Broadcasting Corp. KNBC, Los Angeles, 24 Apr. 1997. Television.
  • 33. The MLA „Bible‟ If you come across anything not mentioned in this presentation or need further information, consult the MLA Handbook in the library! There are many more examples and much useful information inside! Gibaldi, Joseph. MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers. 7th ed. New York: Modern Language Association of America, 2009. Print. Trimmer, Joseph F. A Guide to MLA Documentation: with an Appendix to APA Style. 8th ed. Boston: Wadsworth, 2010. Print.