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IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism

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It is, of course, our ethical responsibility to give credit where credit is due. It is not fair to use the original ideas of others without crediting the source.

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Page 1: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

IN-TEXT CITATIONAvoiding Plagiarism

Page 2: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to elucidate a point, or to corroborate a claim that we have made.

Page 3: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

It is, of course, our ethical responsibility to give credit where credit is due. It is not fair to use the original ideas of others without crediting the source.

Page 4: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

When we present information derived from a source other than our own mind, it is our responsibility to say where that information came from. Unless the information can reasonably be deemed common knowledge, scholars must acknowledge their sources.

Page 5: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Common knowledge is information which can be located in five or more places (i.e., in any number of encyclopedia, in a reference text, in a book, on-line, etc.).

Page 6: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

No matter how quoted material is presented, it must be acknowledged. Please be aware that there are three specific methods of quotation:

Page 7: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Three Types of Quotation:

1.

2.

3.

Page 8: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Three Types of Quotation:

1. Direct quotation –

2.

3.

Page 9: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Three Types of Quotation:

1. Direct quotation – Copying word-for-word.

2.

3.

Page 10: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Three Types of Quotation:

1. Direct quotation – Copying word-for-word.

2. Paraphrase –

3.

Page 11: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Three Types of Quotation:

1. Direct quotation – Copying word-for-word.

2. Paraphrase – Expressing the writer’s intent in your own words.

3.

Page 12: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Three Types of Quotation:

1. Direct quotation – Copying word-for-word.

2. Paraphrase – Expressing the writer’s intent in your own words.

3. Summary –

Page 13: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Three Types of Quotation:

1. Direct quotation – Copying word-for-word.

2. Paraphrase – Expressing the writer’s intent in your own words.

3. Summary – Briefly restating the writer’s ideas.

Page 14: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Naturally, the goal of in-text citation is to avoid plagiarism, which is the unethical use of another’s words or ideas.

Plagiarism amounts to academic theft and is deservedly litigable.

Page 15: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

According to the MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers, the following constitute plagiarism:

Page 16: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

• Copying word for word from another source without acknowledging it.

According to the MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers, the following constitute plagiarism:

Page 17: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

• Copying word for word from another source without acknowledging it.

• Paraphrasing or summarizing another source without acknowledging it.

According to the MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers, the following constitute plagiarism:

Page 18: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

• Copying word for word from another source without acknowledging it.

• Paraphrasing or summarizing another source without acknowledging it.

• Adopting a particularly apt turn of phrase as if it were your own.

According to the MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers, the following constitute plagiarism:

Page 19: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

• Copying word for word from another source without acknowledging it.

• Paraphrasing or summarizing another source without acknowledging it.

• Adopting a particularly apt turn of phrase as if it were your own.

• Using an image or a copy of an image without crediting the source.

According to the MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers, the following constitute plagiarism:

Page 20: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

• Copying word for word from another source without acknowledging it.

• Paraphrasing or summarizing another source without acknowledging it.

• Adopting a particularly apt turn of phrase as if it were your own.

• Using an image or a copy of an image without crediting the source.

• Paraphrasing another’s line of thinking as if it were your own.

According to the MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers, the following constitute plagiarism:

Page 21: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

• Copying word for word from another source without acknowledging it.

• Paraphrasing or summarizing another source without acknowledging it.

• Adopting a particularly apt turn of phrase as if it were your own.

• Using an image or a copy of an image without crediting the source.

• Paraphrasing another’s line of thinking as if it were your own.

• Receiving excessive help from a friend (or, indeed, from any source).

According to the MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers, the following constitute plagiarism:

Page 22: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

• Copying word for word from another source without acknowledging it.

• Paraphrasing or summarizing another source without acknowledging it.

• Adopting a particularly apt turn of phrase as if it were your own.

• Using an image or a copy of an image without crediting the source.

• Paraphrasing another’s line of thinking as if it were your own.

• Receiving excessive help from a friend (or, indeed, from any source).

• Using another’s project as if it were your own.

According to the MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers, the following constitute plagiarism:

Page 23: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Plagiarism is of two types:

Page 24: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Plagiarism is of two types:

1. Deliberate

Page 25: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Plagiarism is of two types:

1. Deliberate

2. Inadvertent

Page 26: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Plagiarism is of two types:

1. Deliberate

2. Inadvertent

Clearly, the former is worse than the latter. However, inadvertent plagiarism is a matter of neglect on the part of the researcher and must be avoided.

Page 27: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

In an effort to guard against plagiarism, the Modern Language Association has devised a simple but effective method of signal phrases and parentheses to show where quotations begin and end.

Signal Phrases+

Parentheses

Page 28: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

The goal, of course, is that readers should know when quoted material of any type is present.

Page 29: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

• A signal phrase is more or less an “on” switch.

• The parenthesis is the “off” switch.

• When a reader sees the signal phrase, she is instantly alerted that the material which follows is a quotation and does not originate with the writer.

• She also knows, as soon as she reaches the parenthesis, that the quotation is over.

Page 30: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

In-text Citations: The Pattern

Page 31: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

In-text Citations: The Pattern

Signal Phrase

Page 32: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

In-text Citations: The Pattern

Signal Phrase + Quotation

Page 33: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

In-text Citations: The Pattern

Signal Phrase + Quotation + Parenthetic Documentation

Page 34: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

In-text Citations: The Pattern

Signal Phrase + Quotation + Parenthetic Documentation

According to Richard Fogle, “[c]ritical opinion has been unanimous in terming the poetry of Shelley ‘abstract’” (13).

Page 35: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Signal PhrasesSignal phrases are introductory phrases which clue the reader in to the fact that a quotation is coming.

Page 36: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Signal PhrasesSignal phrases are introductory phrases which clue the reader in to the fact that a quotation is coming.

Here are some examples, although the variants are limitless:

Page 37: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Signal PhrasesSignal phrases are introductory phrases which clue the reader in to the fact that a quotation is coming.

Here are some examples, although the variants are limitless:

• According to Bruno Bettelheim, . . .

Page 38: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Signal PhrasesSignal phrases are introductory phrases which clue the reader in to the fact that a quotation is coming.

Here are some examples, although the variants are limitless:

• According to Bruno Bettelheim, . . . • In the words of Bruno Bettelheim, . . .

Page 39: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Signal PhrasesSignal phrases are introductory phrases which clue the reader in to the fact that a quotation is coming.

Here are some examples, although the variants are limitless:

• According to Bruno Bettelheim, . . . • In the words of Bruno Bettelheim, . . . • Dr. Bruno Bettelheim has claimed that . . .

Page 40: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Signal PhrasesSignal phrases are introductory phrases which clue the reader in to the fact that a quotation is coming.

Here are some examples, although the variants are limitless:

• According to Bruno Bettelheim, . . . • In the words of Bruno Bettelheim, . . . • Dr. Bruno Bettelheim has claimed that . . . • The research of Dr. Bruno Bettelheim suggests that . . .

Page 41: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Signal PhrasesSignal phrases are introductory phrases which clue the reader in to the fact that a quotation is coming.

Here are some examples, although the variants are limitless:

• According to Bruno Bettelheim, . . . • In the words of Bruno Bettelheim, . . . • Dr. Bruno Bettelheim has claimed that . . . • The research of Dr. Bruno Bettelheim suggests that . . . • To cite Bruno Bettelheim, . . .

Page 42: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Signal PhrasesSignal phrases are introductory phrases which clue the reader in to the fact that a quotation is coming.

Here are some examples, although the variants are limitless:

• According to Bruno Bettelheim, . . . • In the words of Bruno Bettelheim, . . . • Dr. Bruno Bettelheim has claimed that . . . • The research of Dr. Bruno Bettelheim suggests that . . . • To cite Bruno Bettelheim, . . . • Dr. Bruno Bettelheim once said, . . .

Page 43: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Signal PhrasesSignal phrases are introductory phrases which clue the reader in to the fact that a quotation is coming.

Here are some examples, although the variants are limitless:

• According to Bruno Bettelheim, . . . • In the words of Bruno Bettelheim, . . . • Dr. Bruno Bettelheim has claimed that . . . • The research of Dr. Bruno Bettelheim suggests that . . . • To cite Bruno Bettelheim, . . . • Dr. Bruno Bettelheim once said, . . . • Bruno Bettelheim observed that . . .

Page 44: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Signal PhrasesSignal phrases are introductory phrases which clue the reader in to the fact that a quotation is coming.

Here are some examples, although the variants are limitless:

• According to Bruno Bettelheim, . . . • In the words of Bruno Bettelheim, . . . • Dr. Bruno Bettelheim has claimed that . . . • The research of Dr. Bruno Bettelheim suggests that . . . • To cite Bruno Bettelheim, . . . • Dr. Bruno Bettelheim once said, . . . • Bruno Bettelheim observed that . . . • Dr. Bettelheim explains that . . .

Page 45: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Signal PhrasesSignal phrases are introductory phrases which clue the reader in to the fact that a quotation is coming.

Here are some examples, although the variants are limitless:

• According to Bruno Bettelheim, . . . • In the words of Bruno Bettelheim, . . . • Dr. Bruno Bettelheim has claimed that . . . • The research of Dr. Bruno Bettelheim suggests that . . . • To cite Bruno Bettelheim, . . . • Dr. Bruno Bettelheim once said, . . . • Bruno Bettelheim observed that . . . • Dr. Bettelheim explains that . . . • Bruno Bettelheim contends that . . .

Page 46: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Signal PhrasesSignal phrases are introductory phrases which clue the reader in to the fact that a quotation is coming.

Here are some examples, although the variants are limitless:

• According to Bruno Bettelheim . . . • In the words of Bruno Bettelheim . . . • Dr. Bruno Bettelheim has claimed that . . . • The research of Dr. Bruno Bettelheim suggests that . . . • To cite Bruno Bettelheim, . . . • Dr. Bruno Bettelheim once said, . . . • Bruno Bettelheim observed that . . . • Dr. Bettelheim explains that . . . •Bruno Bettelheim contends that . . . • etc.

Page 47: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Now that you have used a signal phrase to set your reader up for a quotation, it’s time to move on to the quotation itself:

As you will remember, there are three kinds of quotation:

1. Direct quotation – Copying word-for-word.

2. Paraphrase – Expressing the writer’s intent in your own words.

3. Summary – Briefly restating the writer’s ideas.

Page 48: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Direct QuotationsDirect quotations cite the text directly—in other words, you copy the original text word-for-word, with no variation.

Remember, direct quotation is as near to plagiarism as you can come.

For that reason, direct quotation should be used SPARINGLY.

Direct quotation may be used to cite (a) poetry, (b) literary passages of exceptional quality, or (c) prose where the author’s words are so memorable as to deserve no other form of expression.

Page 49: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Direct QuotationsIn general, direct quotations are introduced by a signal phrase and a comma:

According to Humphrey House, “For thousands now alive a passionate love of Shelley was a major experience in their young development” (47).

Page 50: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Direct QuotationsIn general, direct quotations are introduced by a signal phrase and a comma:

According to Humphrey House, “For thousands now alive a passionate love of Shelley was a major experience in their young development” (47).

However, there is no comma required after the word that:

Page 51: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Direct QuotationsIn general, direct quotations are introduced by a signal phrase and a comma:

According to Humphrey House, “For thousands now alive a passionate love of Shelley was a major experience in their young development” (47).

However, there is no comma required after the word that:

Humphrey House insists that “[f]or thousands now alive a passionate love of Shelley was a major experience in their young development” (47).

Page 52: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Types of Direct Quotation:

There are essentially two types of direct quotation—short and long.

1.

2.

Page 53: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Types of Direct Quotation:

There are essentially two types of direct quotation—short and long.

1. A short quotation consists of no more than three lines.

2.

Page 54: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Types of Direct Quotation:

There are essentially two types of direct quotation—short and long.

1. A short quotation consists of no more than three lines.

2. A long quotation consists of four lines or more.

Page 55: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Short QuotationsShort quotations are placed inside quotation marks:

Page 56: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Short QuotationsShort quotations are placed inside quotation marks:

House says of Shelley that “his poetry enthralls boys (girls rather less, I fancy) as no other poetry enthralls them” (47-8).

Page 57: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Short Quotations: Poetry

Page 58: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Short Quotations: PoetryQuoting poetry or song has some special requirements all of its own. When quoting a short selection of poetry, the line divisions must be shown as follows:

Page 59: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Short Quotations: PoetryQuoting poetry or song has some special requirements all of its own. When quoting a short selection of poetry, the line divisions must be shown as follows:

Frost considered the path that lay before him, “Then took the other, as just as fair / And having perhaps the better claim / Because it was grassy and wanted wear” (5). In other words, he chose the path because it wasn’t quite so popular as the other and would give him more leeway as an individual.

Page 60: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Short Quotations: PoetryQuoting poetry or song has some special requirements all of its own. When quoting a short selection of poetry, the line divisions must be shown as follows:

Frost considered the path that lay before him, “Then took the other, as just as fair / And having perhaps the better claim / Because it was grassy and wanted wear” (5). In other words, he chose the path because it wasn’t quite so popular as the other and would give him more leeway as an individual.

*Note that the slash has a space on each side.

Page 61: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Long QuotationsLong quotations are blocked, i.e., they are typographically set apart from the rest of the text by being indented ten spaces. Blocked quotations do not require quotation marks.

Page 62: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Spalding 2

assumption merely, both Kreon and Teiresias of political ambition,

asserting his assumed superiorit over rivals, seers, and the gods

themselves in those reckless words:

Has your mystic mummery ever approached the truth?

When that hellcat the sphinx was performing here,

What help were you to these people?

Her magic was not for the first man who came along:

It demanded a real exorcist. Your birds—

What good were they? Or the gods, for the matter of that?

But I came by,

Oedipus, the simple man, who knows nothing—

I thought it out for myself, no birds helped me!

And this is the man you think you can destroy,

That you may be close to Kreon when he’s king! (759-60)

And there we have it. Hubris, overweening pride, is the great

flaw that Oedipus has harbored in his heart these many years. Wrath

is his downfall now, just as it was all those years earlier when he

unwittingly slaughtered his own father and married his mother. It is

arrogance, always, which destroys greatness and humbles the mighty.

Caesar’s elevation to the rank of a god could not protect him from the

knives of those he called his friends. Hitler’s belief in the supremacy of

Page 63: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Spalding 2

assumption merely, both Kreon and Teiresias of political ambition,

asserting his assumed superiorit over rivals, seers, and the gods

themselves in those reckless words:

Has your mystic mummery ever approached the truth?

When that hellcat the sphinx was performing here,

What help were you to these people?

Her magic was not for the first man who came along:

It demanded a real exorcist. Your birds—

What good were they? Or the gods, for the matter of that?

But I came by,

Oedipus, the simple man, who knows nothing—

I thought it out for myself, no birds helped me!

And this is the man you think you can destroy,

That you may be close to Kreon when he’s king! (759-60)

And there we have it. Hubris, overweening pride, is the great

flaw that Oedipus has harbored in his heart these many years. Wrath

is his downfall now, just as it was all those years earlier when he

unwittingly slaughtered his own father and married his mother. It is

arrogance, always, which destroys greatness and humbles the mighty.

Caesar’s elevation to the rank of a god could not protect him from the

knives of those he called his friends. Hitler’s belief in the supremacy of

Blo

ck Q

uota

tion

– In

dent

one

inch

– o

r ten

spa

ces.

Page 64: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Spalding 2

assumption merely, both Kreon and Teiresias of political ambition,

asserting his assumed superiorit over rivals, seers, and the gods

themselves in those reckless words:

Has your mystic mummery ever approached the truth?

When that hellcat the sphinx was performing here,

What help were you to these people?

Her magic was not for the first man who came along:

It demanded a real exorcist. Your birds—

What good were they? Or the gods, for the matter of that?

But I came by,

Oedipus, the simple man, who knows nothing—

I thought it out for myself, no birds helped me!

And this is the man you think you can destroy,

That you may be close to Kreon when he’s king! (759-60)

And there we have it. Hubris, overweening pride, is the great

flaw that Oedipus has harbored in his heart these many years. Wrath

is his downfall now, just as it was all those years earlier when he

unwittingly slaughtered his own father and married his mother. It is

arrogance, always, which destroys greatness and humbles the mighty.

Caesar’s elevation to the rank of a god could not protect him from the

knives of those he called his friends. Hitler’s belief in the supremacy of

Blo

ck Q

uota

tion

– In

dent

one

inch

– o

r ten

spa

ces.

Page 65: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Spalding 2

assumption merely, both Kreon and Teiresias of political ambition,

asserting his assumed superiorit over rivals, seers, and the gods

themselves in those reckless words:

Has your mystic mummery ever approached the truth?

When that hellcat the sphinx was performing here,

What help were you to these people?

Her magic was not for the first man who came along:

It demanded a real exorcist. Your birds—

What good were they? Or the gods, for the matter of that?

But I came by,

Oedipus, the simple man, who knows nothing—

I thought it out for myself, no birds helped me!

And this is the man you think you can destroy,

That you may be close to Kreon when he’s king! (759-60)

And there we have it. Hubris, overweening pride, is the great

flaw that Oedipus has harbored in his heart these many years. Wrath

is his downfall now, just as it was all those years earlier when he

unwittingly slaughtered his own father and married his mother. It is

arrogance, always, which destroys greatness and humbles the mighty.

Caesar’s elevation to the rank of a god could not protect him from the

knives of those he called his friends. Hitler’s belief in the supremacy of

Ple

ase

note

, the

re a

re n

o qu

otat

ion

mar

ks a

t th

e be

ginn

ing

or e

nd o

f a b

lock

quo

tatio

n.

Page 66: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Spalding 2

assumption merely, both Kreon and Teiresias of political ambition,

asserting his assumed superiorit over rivals, seers, and the gods

themselves in those reckless words:

Has your mystic mummery ever approached the truth?

When that hellcat the sphinx was performing here,

What help were you to these people?

Her magic was not for the first man who came along:

It demanded a real exorcist. Your birds—

What good were they? Or the gods, for the matter of that?

But I came by,

Oedipus, the simple man, who knows nothing—

I thought it out for myself, no birds helped me!

And this is the man you think you can destroy,

That you may be close to Kreon when he’s king!

And there we have it. Hubris, overweening pride, is the great

flaw that Oedipus has harbored in his heart these many years. Wrath

is his downfall now, just as it was all those years earlier when he

unwittingly slaughtered his own father and married his mother. It is

arrogance, always, which destroys greatness and humbles the mighty.

Caesar’s elevation to the rank of a god could not protect him from the

knives of those he called his friends. Hitler’s belief in the supremacy of Ple

ase

note

, the

re a

re n

o qu

otat

ion

mar

ks a

t th

e be

ginn

ing

or e

nd o

f a b

lock

quo

tatio

n.

Page 67: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Spalding 2

assumption merely, both Kreon and Teiresias of political ambition,

asserting his assumed superiorit over rivals, seers, and the gods

themselves in those reckless words:

Has your mystic mummery ever approached the truth?

When that hellcat the sphinx was performing here,

What help were you to these people?

Her magic was not for the first man who came along:

It demanded a real exorcist. Your birds—

What good were they? Or the gods, for the matter of that?

But I came by,

Oedipus, the simple man, who knows nothing—

I thought it out for myself, no birds helped me!

And this is the man you think you can destroy,

That you may be close to Kreon when he’s king! (759-60)

And there we have it. Hubris, overweening pride, is the great

flaw that Oedipus has harbored in his heart these many years. Wrath

is his downfall now, just as it was all those years earlier when he

unwittingly slaughtered his own father and married his mother. It is

arrogance, always, which destroys greatness and humbles the mighty.

Caesar’s elevation to the rank of a god could not protect him from the

knives of those he called his friends. Hitler’s belief in the supremacy of

Note that in a block quotation, the

parenthesis goes outside the period.

Page 68: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Spalding 2

assumption merely, both Kreon and Teiresias of political ambition,

asserting his assumed superiorit over rivals, seers, and the gods

themselves in those reckless words:

Has your mystic mummery ever approached the truth?

When that hellcat the sphinx was performing here,

What help were you to these people?

Her magic was not for the first man who came along:

It demanded a real exorcist. Your birds—

What good were they? Or the gods, for the matter of that?

But I came by,

Oedipus, the simple man, who knows nothing—

I thought it out for myself, no birds helped me!

And this is the man you think you can destroy,

That you may be close to Kreon when he’s king! (759-60)

And there we have it. Hubris, overweening pride, is the great

flaw that Oedipus has harbored in his heart these many years. Wrath

is his downfall now, just as it was all those years earlier when he

unwittingly slaughtered his own father and married his mother. It is

arrogance, always, which destroys greatness and humbles the mighty.

Caesar’s elevation to the rank of a god could not protect him from the

knives of those he called his friends. Hitler’s belief in the supremacy of

Note that in a block quotation, the

parenthesis goes outside the period.

Page 69: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Spalding 2

assumption merely, both Kreon and Teiresias of political ambition,

asserting his assumed superiorit over rivals, seers, and the gods

themselves in those reckless words:

Has your mystic mummery ever approached the truth?

When that hellcat the sphinx was performing here,

What help were you to these people?

Her magic was not for the first man who came along:

It demanded a real exorcist. Your birds—

What good were they? Or the gods, for the matter of that?

But I came by,

Oedipus, the simple man, who knows nothing—

I thought it out for myself, no birds helped me!

And this is the man you think you can destroy,

That you may be close to Kreon when he’s king! (759-60)

And there we have it. Hubris, overweening pride, is the great

flaw that Oedipus has harbored in his heart these many years. Wrath

is his downfall now, just as it was all those years earlier when he

unwittingly slaughtered his own father and married his mother. It is

arrogance, always, which destroys greatness and humbles the mighty.

Caesar’s elevation to the rank of a god could not protect him from the

knives of those he called his friends. Hitler’s belief in the supremacy of

Blo

ck Q

uota

tion

– In

dent

one

inch

– o

r ten

spa

ces.

Note that in a block quotation, the parenthesis goes outside the period.

Ple

ase

note

, the

re a

re n

o qu

otat

ion

mar

ks a

t the

beg

inni

ng o

r end

of a

bl

ock

quot

atio

n.

Page 70: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Parenthetic DocumentationIf you were paying attention, you would have noticed the presence, at the end of each quotation, of a number in parentheses. The moment you see this parenthetic notation, you know that the quotation is over.

The number, of course, is the page number on which the quotation is found. This number is tied to the Works Cited page at the end of the paper. The signal phrase usually provides the information which the reader needs to locate the appropriate Works Cited entry (either the author’s last name, or the title of the book or article). When a signal phrase is not used, then more information may need to be included in the parenthesis.

Page 71: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Parenthetic DocumentationIf you were paying attention, you would have noticed the presence, at the end of each quotation, of a number in parentheses. The moment you see this parenthetic notation, you know that the quotation is over.

The number, of course, is the page number on which the quotation is found. This number is tied to the Works Cited page at the end of the paper. The signal phrase usually provides the information which the reader needs to locate the appropriate Works Cited entry (either the author’s last name, or the title of the book or article). When a signal phrase is not used, then more information may need to be included in the parenthesis.

House says of Shelley that “his poetry enthralls boys (girls rather less, I fancy) as no other poetry enthralls them” (47-8).

Page 72: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Parenthetic DocumentationIf you were paying attention, you would have noticed the presence, at the end of each quotation, of a number in parentheses. The moment you see this parenthetic notation, you know that the quotation is over.

The number, of course, is the page number on which the quotation is found. This number is tied to the Works Cited page at the end of the paper. The signal phrase usually provides the information which the reader needs to locate the appropriate Works Cited entry (either the author’s last name, or the title of the book or article). When a signal phrase is not used, then more information may need to be included in the parenthesis.

House says of Shelley that “his poetry enthralls boys (girls rather less, I fancy) as no other poetry enthralls them” (47-8).

Please note that the period includes the parenthetic documentation.

Page 73: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Parenthetic DocumentationIf you were paying attention, you would have noticed the presence, at the end of each quotation, of a number in parentheses. The moment you see this parenthetic notation, you know that the quotation is over.

The number, of course, is the page number on which the quotation is found. This number is tied to the Works Cited page at the end of the paper. The signal phrase usually provides the information which the reader needs to locate the appropriate Works Cited entry (either the author’s last name, or the title of the book or article). When a signal phrase is not used, then more information may need to be included in the parenthesis.

House says of Shelley that “his poetry enthralls boys (girls rather less, I fancy) as no other poetry enthralls them” (47-8).

Apparently, Shelley’s poetry “enthralls boys . . . as no other poetry enthralls them” (House 47-8).

Page 74: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

Parenthetic DocumentationIf you were paying attention, you would have noticed the presence, at the end of each quotation, of a number in parentheses. The moment you see this parenthetic notation, you know that the quotation is over.

The number, of course, is the page number on which the quotation is found. This number is tied to the Works Cited page at the end of the paper. The signal phrase usually provides the information which the reader needs to locate the appropriate Works Cited entry (either the author’s last name, or the title of the book or article). When a signal phrase is not used, then more information may need to be included in the parenthesis.

House says of Shelley that “his poetry enthralls boys (girls rather less, I fancy) as no other poetry enthralls them” (47-8).

Apparently, Shelley’s poetry “enthralls boys . . . as no other poetry enthralls them” (House 47-8).

Apparently, Shelley’s poetry “enthralls boys . . . as no other poetry enthralls them” (Shelley 47-8).

Page 75: IN-TEXT CITATION Avoiding Plagiarism. Academic writing often involves quotation. We cite what others have said on topics of interest to us, either to

CongratulationsYou now have the basic pattern established for proper in-text citation and we will move on to the proper format for the Works Cited page. But that is another lesson altogether.

The EndPowerPoint Presentation by Mark A. Spalding, BA, MEd, MA, 2007.