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ENGL 398: Applied Literary Studies: Writing & Citing (MLA)

Introduction

MLA is most often used in English, Rhetoric, foreign language, and the humanities. Citations are created using both a detailed works cited list appearing at the end of a paper and brief in-text citations that direct readers to particular sources from that reference list. 

The examples and rules described on this page are intended as a quick reference for general MLA citation. For more sources with exhaustive rules, exceptions to rules, and types of sources not described here, see the MLA resources below. 

MLA Resources

Writing Center

The Oberlin College Writing Center offers a dynamic space for students to think critically, be creative, and collaborate with their peers. OCWC is located in the Academic Commons on the main level of Mudd Center. 

Works Cited

​An MLA Works Cited citation should include the following elements if they are relevant to the work. Use the punctuation shown below: 

  1. Author.
    • Last Name, First Name
  2. Title of source.
    • If the source has a container, you will typically put the title of the source in quotation marks. 
    • If the source does not have a container, or if it would most commonly be published without a container, put the title of the source in italics. 
  3. Title of container,
    • Use italics
  4. Other contributors,
    • Specify their role, for example, translated by. 
  5. Version,
    • Abbreviate revised and edition as rev. and ed. respectively
    • Use Arabic numerals for ordinal numbers
  6. Number,
    • Abbreviate volume and number as vol. and no. respectively and separate them with a comma
  7. Publisher,
    •  
  8. Publication date,
    • Day Month Year
    • Months may be abbreviated
  9. Location.
    • Print source
      • Include the pages, abbreviate pages as pp. 
    • Digital source
      • Use a DOI if one is available
      • If a DOI is not available, use a permalink, and omit http:// or https://
      • If a permalink is not available, use a standard URL, and omit http:// or https://

Journal Article

Gold, Susanna W. "The Death of Cleopatra /the Birth of Freedom: Edmonia Lewis at the New World's Fair." Biography, vol. 35, no. 2, 2012, pp. 318-341.

Book

Morris, J. B. Oberlin, Hotbed of Abolitionism: College, Community, and the Fight for Freedom and Equality in Antebellum America. The University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill, 2014.