The Mention-Citation Sandwich Creating PARENTHETICAL CITATIONS and A Works Cited Page MLA...
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Transcript of The Mention-Citation Sandwich Creating PARENTHETICAL CITATIONS and A Works Cited Page MLA...
The Mention-Citation Sandwich
Creating PARENTHETICAL CITATIONS
andA Works Cited Page
MLA Documentation
Basic Document Format
• Double space everything• Last name and page number on right
margin of header• Information at top of page one is
standardized (your name, instructor name, class, date)
• Title is centered• Works Cited page appears on separate
page after the text is finished
Sample First Page
What is MLA?• Modern Language Association
– Humanities– Most 4-year college classes will use
• Other documentation styles– Chicago Style– APA
• Used by Social Sciences• Most handbooks do cover APA
– Many other specialized
• Once you learn one, others easy to adapt– All include citations within the text (or endnotes
or footnotes) and some type of bibliography
A Three-Pronged Attack
• Mention– In the paper, you will introduce sources– Get used to phrases like, “According to….”
• Citation– Parenthetical citations signal the end of source
material
• Works Cited Page– Your book/handbook provides models
Part 1: The Mention
• Come right out and say it!
• Use the author’s full name and article or book title the first time.
• Author’s last name thereafter.
• Sample:– According to Models
for Writers by Alfred Rosa and Paul Eschholz, “To describe is to create a verbal picture” (343).
– Rosa and Eschholz go on to give an example written by Thomas Mann of a deli (343).
Part 2: The Citation
• What goes inside the parentheses will vary by what source you have.
• Print sources: Author’s last name and page number (Smith 25).
• Electronic sources won’t have a page number: (Smith).
• Anonymous articles or books: abbreviation of the title— “Time for a Change” would become (“Time” 27) or (“Time”).
• Sample:– According to Models for
Writers by Alfred Rosa and Paul Eschholz, “To describe is to create a verbal picture” (343).
– Rosa and Eschholz go on to give an example written by Thomas Mann of a deli (343).
The Mention-Citation Sandwich
• It is NOT ok to just have a citation at the end of a paragraph– Implies that only the last sentence came from
the source
• By starting with a mention and ending with a citation, you make it clear everything from point A to point B came from that same source
• Examples….
The Mention-Citation Sandwich• Incorrect
The traditional Southern “lady” is the mistress of her husband’s plantation and a “symbol of lost virtue” in that the Southern men hadn’t been able to insure her safety during the Civil War..... A wife’s vocation was to enhance the comfort, social status, and masculinity of her husband” (Blackwelder 98).
• CorrectIn “Ladies, Belles, Working Women, and Civil
Rights,” Julia Kirk Blackwelder offers a model of the traditional Southern “lady”: she is the mistress of her husband’s plantation and a “symbol of lost virtue” in that the Southern men hadn’t been able to insure her safety during the Civil War.... A wife’s vocation was to enhance the comfort, social status, and masculinity of her husband” (98).
Works Cited Page
• Purpose: to give the reader the information necessary to find the source for him or herself.
• Contains all bibliographic information such as author, title, source, dates, etc.
• The information you will need includes:– Author, Title, Source, Date, Place/Publisher,
Medium and sometimes more.
Works Cited Rules
• Alphabetized by author’s last name.
• If no author, the title is used.
• Double-spaced using “hanging indent.”
• Comes at the end of your paper but is part of the same document.
Other Tidbits
• Capitalization of Titles– Use initial capitalization even if the source you
got it from does not! (Online sources are notorious for not following MLA rules.)
• Quotation Marks for Titles– Magazine articles, songs, TV episodes, poems,
stories, etc.
• Italics for Titles– Books, CD’s, TV shows, movies,
journals, websites etc.
Creating Entries
• All books & textbooks which cover how to cite sources do so by example– The LSCC Library has kindly provided a
handout that gives samples based on our databases and other resources
• Also examine the sections in our textbooks that give samples of Works Cited entries.
• Use your handbook first!
Computer Help with Works Cited
• When finished typing the paper itself, press Enter• Go to the INSERT menu and insert a PAGE BREAK• Center the phrase “Works Cited”• Press ENTER, return to the Left Margin, and turn on
“Hanging Indent”
– Use the Format/Paragraph Menu– Can also use the Ruler
Adding Source Material to Your Paper
Quoting, Paraphrasing, and Summary
Quoting
• Word-for-word inclusion of information from a source.
• Indicated as a quote with quotation marks.• When to use? When the original wording
is particularly striking or important.• Avoid over-using quotes, especially long
quotes that will have to be indented.
Paraphrasing
• More than just re-wording.• Cannot have the same sentence structure.• A statement wholly in your own words that
captures information from a source.• Will not use quotation marks, but will still
indicate that a source is involved—mention/citation sandwich!
Summarizing
• Similar to paraphrase in that summary is in your own words and does not mimic the structure of the original in any way.
• The difference is that summary boils something large into something smaller.– A whole book could be summarized in one
paragraph.– A whole paragraph or essay might take up only
one sentence.
Clarity is Key
• How does your reader know what ideas are yours and what come from your sources?
• By using the Mention-Citation Sandwich, you will always make it clear where you end and where your sources begin.
• The following slide offers a sample from a research paper with the “source” areas inside the red mention-citations, and original material in blue.
One artist who has recently come under fire is Reggae performer Beenie Man. As Peter Bailey’s article “Beenie Man Feels the Heat” points out, “Beenie Man is … taking heat from gay activists for his violently homophobic lyrics” (Bailey). Even if music like Beenie Man’s doesn’t make kids commit violent acts, you do have to wonder how appropriate it is for kids. OutRage President Peter Tatchell says, “’We’re talking about someone who is saying you should burn gay people alive’” (Bailey). Clearly, such acts are not acceptable. Bailey goes on to discuss a criminal case currently pending against Beenie Man in England. There, it is illegal “to use threatening words to incite violence” (Bailey).
Now What?
• Your mission…..– To successfully document
sources in your Research Paper and any paper you ever write in which you get material from a source other than your brain
• The payoff….– Your instructors will love
you!– You will never inadvertently
plagiarize again!– See your instructor or
the Learning Center for extra help!
by
Jacklyn
R. PierceOriginal
Content for Slides
Working on the Works Cited Page
Print Sources on the Works Cited Page
Citing A One Author Book
Freeman, Michael. Bloody Sundays: Inside the
Dazzling, Rough-and-Tumble World of the
NFL. New York: William Morrow, 2003. Print.
Author Last, First. Title. City: Publisher,
Date. Medium.
Citing A Two Author Book
Freeman, Michael and Dan Jones. Bloody
Sundays: Inside the Dazzling, Rough-and-
Tumble World of the NFL. New York: William
Morrow, 2003. Print.
Author Last, First and First Last. Title.
City: Publisher, Date. Medium.
Citing A Three Author Book
Freeman, Michael, James Smith and Dan Jones.
Bloody Sundays: Inside the Dazzling, Rough-
and- Tumble World of the NFL. New York:
William Morrow, 2003. Print.
Author Last, First, First Last, First Last.
Title. City: Publisher, Date. Medium.
Citing A Four or More Author Book
Freeman, Michael, et al. Bloody Sundays: Inside
the Dazzling, Rough-and- Tumble World of the
NFL. New York: William Morrow, 2003. Print.
Author Last, First, et al. Title. City:
Publisher, Date. Medium.
Citing A One Editor Book
Freeman, Michael, ed. Bloody Sundays: Inside
the Dazzling, Rough-and-Tumble World of the
NFL. New York: William Morrow, 2003. Print.
Author Last, First, ed. Title. City:
Publisher, Date. Medium.
Citing A Two Editor Book
Freeman, Michael and Dan Jones, eds. Bloody
Sundays: Inside the Dazzling, Rough-and-
Tumble World of the NFL. New York: William
Morrow, 2003. Print.
Author Last, First and First Last, eds.
Title. City: Publisher, Date. Medium.
Citing A Three Editor Book
Freeman, Michael, James Smith and Dan Jones, eds.
Bloody Sundays: Inside the Dazzling, Rough-
and- Tumble World of the NFL. New York:
William Morrow, 2003. Print.
Author Last, First, First Last, First Last, eds.
Title. City: Publisher, Date. Medium.
Citing A Four or More Editor Book
Freeman, Michael, et al., eds. Bloody Sundays:
Inside the Dazzling, Rough-and- Tumble World of
the NFL. New York: William Morrow, 2003. Print.
Author Last, First, et al., eds. Title. City:
Publisher, Date. Medium.
Use the same format for naming authors and editors in books, articles, and websites, whenever the names are available.
Citing Articles with Author
Freeman, Michael. “Bloody Sundays: Inside the
Dazzling, Rough- and-Tumble World of the
NFL.” Sports Illustrated 20 Dec. 2005: 224+.
Print.
Author Last, First. “Title of Article.”
Periodical Date: Page(s). Medium.
Citing Articles with No Author
“Bloody Sundays: Inside the Dazzling, Rough-
and-Tumble World of the NFL.” Sports
Illustrated 20 Dec. 2005: 224+. Print.
“Title of Article.” Periodical
Date: Page(s). Medium.
Citing Article Dates
“Bloody Sundays: Inside the Dazzling, Rough-
and-Tumble World of the NFL.” Sports
Illustrated 20 Dec. 2005: 224+. Print.
Weekly: 20 Dec. 2005:
Monthly: Dec. 2005:
Bimonthly: Nov- Dec. 2005:
Citing Articles with Volumes and Issues
“Bloody Sundays: Inside the Dazzling, Rough-
and-Tumble World of the NFL.” Sports
Journal 22.3 (2005): 224+. Print.
“Title of Article.” Periodical Volume.Issue
(Year): Page(s). Medium.
Web Sources on the Works Cited Page
E-Book
Author Last, First. Title. City:
Publisher,
Date. Source. Medium. Retrieved
Date.
Freeman, Michael. Bloody Sundays: Inside the
Dazzling, Rough-and-Tumble World of the
NFL. New York: William Morrow, 2003.
NetLibrary. Web. 21 May 2009
Magazine from a Database
Author Last, First. “Title of Article.” Periodical
Date: Page(s). Source. Medium. Retrieved
Date.
Freeman, Michael. “Bloody Sundays: Inside the
Dazzling, Rough- and-Tumble World of the
NFL.” Sports Illustrated 20 Dec. 2005: 224+.
Academic Search Complete. Web. 21 May
2009.