mla parenthetical citations

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Parenthetical Citations in disgustingly gross detail. CODE: CD6

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Page 1: MLA Parenthetical Citations

Parenthetical CitationsParenthetical Citationsin disgustingly gross detail.in disgustingly gross detail.

CODE: CD6

Page 2: MLA Parenthetical Citations

Reminder:Reminder: We use parenthetical citations to give

credit to the people’s thoughts we use. We give credit for:

direct quotes paraphrasing summarizing

We use parenthetical citations to give

credit to the people’s thoughts we use. We give credit for:

direct quotes paraphrasing summarizing

Page 3: MLA Parenthetical Citations

The general, garden variety citation:

The general, garden variety citation:

We see Scout admit that she lies to her father when she says, “I said I could like it very much, which was a lie, but one must lie under certain circumstances” (Lee 128).

We see Scout admit that she lies to her father when she says, “I said I could like it very much, which was a lie, but one must lie under certain circumstances” (Lee 128).

Page 4: MLA Parenthetical Citations

Two things to note:Two things to note: We see Scout admit that she lies to her father when she

says, “I said I could like it very much, which was a lie, but one must lie under certain circumstances” (Lee 128).

We see Scout admit that she lies to her father when she says, “I said I could like it very much, which was a lie, but one must lie under certain circumstances” (Lee 128).

1. The author’s name and page number appear without a “p” or comma• we know the number

is a page• we don’t need a

comma, either

2. Punctuation appears outside the quotation• there are certain

circumstances that require punctuation inside the quotation…

Page 5: MLA Parenthetical Citations

“Certain circumstances:”“Certain circumstances:” When the quotation has pertinent

punctuation in it that change the meaning if omitted The older waiter in Hemingway's "A Clean,

Well-Lighted Place" asks himself, "What did he fear?" (79).

But notice, there is still a closing punctuation mark after the citation

When the quotation has pertinent punctuation in it that change the meaning if omitted The older waiter in Hemingway's "A Clean,

Well-Lighted Place" asks himself, "What did he fear?" (79).

But notice, there is still a closing punctuation mark after the citation

Page 6: MLA Parenthetical Citations

Speaking of Hemingway…Speaking of Hemingway…

You might have noticed that the citation didn’t have an author in it! The older waiter in Hemingway's "A Clean, Well-

Lighted Place" asks himself, "What did he fear?" (79). That’s because I already gave the

author credit! Do you see it?

You might have noticed that the citation didn’t have an author in it! The older waiter in Hemingway's "A Clean, Well-

Lighted Place" asks himself, "What did he fear?" (79). That’s because I already gave the

author credit! Do you see it?

Page 7: MLA Parenthetical Citations

Trickery:Trickery: Citing the author this

way (in the sentence itself) accomplishes two things:

1. it cites the author (duh)2. it varies your sentence

structure automatically for you!– this = good writing

Citing the author this way (in the sentence itself) accomplishes two things:

1. it cites the author (duh)2. it varies your sentence

structure automatically for you!– this = good writing

Page 8: MLA Parenthetical Citations

What about those pesky internet sources?

What about those pesky internet sources?

Cite the author, forget the page number no pages in cyberspace

No author? Should you really use the site? if no one takes credit for it, is it

a credible site? If you must, cite the website

Cite the author, forget the page number no pages in cyberspace

No author? Should you really use the site? if no one takes credit for it, is it

a credible site? If you must, cite the website

Page 9: MLA Parenthetical Citations

Internet Example (Preferable)Internet Example (Preferable)

If you MUST use one without an author, use the article title: There is no truth to the rumor that al-Qaeda

has poisoned the Coca-Cola supply in our country (“Coca-Cola No Al Queda”).

If you MUST use one without an author, use the article title: There is no truth to the rumor that al-Qaeda

has poisoned the Coca-Cola supply in our country (“Coca-Cola No Al Queda”).

Page 10: MLA Parenthetical Citations

Internet example (no title?):Internet example (no title?): There is no truth to the rumor that al-

Qaeda has poisoned the Coca-Cola supply in our country (snopes.com).

There is no truth to the rumor that al-Qaeda has poisoned the Coca-Cola supply in our country (snopes.com).

Note:• I did not give the complete URL, only a snippet

• the complete URL goes on your Works Cited page.

•Also note that the good folks at “snopes.com” DO take credit for their work•Their names are Barbara and David Mickelson and they do a nice job fact-checking…

Page 11: MLA Parenthetical Citations

But again,But again, Try to use as few

unaccredited web pages as humanly possible

Source validity is a huge concern when the source takes no credit for their work

Try to use as few unaccredited web pages as humanly possible

Source validity is a huge concern when the source takes no credit for their work

Page 12: MLA Parenthetical Citations

Multiple authors:Multiple authors: If more than one

author wrote your article, they need to be cited. This applies to

less than three authors

less than / including three, cite them all!

If more than one author wrote your article, they need to be cited. This applies to

less than three authors

less than / including three, cite them all!

Page 13: MLA Parenthetical Citations

Multiple authors example:Multiple authors example: There has been a drastic increase in

frivolous lawsuits in the United States in the last ten years (Dewey, Cheatum and Howe 45).

There has been a drastic increase in frivolous lawsuits in the United States in the last ten years (Dewey, Cheatum and Howe 45).

Note all authors credited with last name only.

Page 14: MLA Parenthetical Citations

More than three authors?More than three authors? Bust out the Latin stick!

“et al” is your pal! “et al” literally translates to

“and others” Cite the first author, then

slap an “et al” after it! only applies to references

with more than three authors!

Bust out the Latin stick! “et al” is your pal!

“et al” literally translates to “and others”

Cite the first author, then slap an “et al” after it! only applies to references

with more than three authors!

Page 15: MLA Parenthetical Citations

Finally, the interview sources:

Finally, the interview sources:

Cite the last name of the interviewee

Then that it was an interview

Cite the last name of the interviewee

Then that it was an interview

Page 16: MLA Parenthetical Citations

Interview example:Interview example: As junior students, we were told that this

paper is “dummy proof and it’s impossible to do wrong if you try” (Lesh interview).

As junior students, we were told that this paper is “dummy proof and it’s impossible to do wrong if you try” (Lesh interview).

Note the same rules apply:1. no comma2. punctuation outside of the

parentheses