MLA guide

From English Wiki
Revision as of 06:57, 6 January 2017 by Kentlee7 (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

The MLA citation and referencing system (from the Modern Language Association) is used internationally for academic writing in the humanities, particularly in literature and media studies. The APA guide contains specifications for in-text source citations and end references (which are called works cited). In-text citations follow an author-page parenthetical style, in that sources are cited in-text by citing author names and page numbers, or secondarily, other information.


1 Overview

The MLA system puts more emphasis on the author and location of information within the source in the in-text citations, and also in the works cited, in that the author and source title are the first two elements of each end reference, with dates near the end, in contrast to systems like the [APA guide | APA], which emphasize author and date. In the MLA, dates are less important, while authors, source, and the locus of information in a source are more relevant to the kind of humanities research for which MLA is designed. This is because in such fields, it is common to cite older sources, sources with multiple dates due to translation, undated sources, media materials, and electronic sources.

The MLA has undergone multiple significant revisions in the past decade. Currently, the 8th edition of the MLA is commonly used, which was published in 2016[1]. Previous versions used a parenthetical author-date system for in-text citations, which changed to an author-page system in the 7th edition. The 8th edition revamped the system with a clear framework that offers flexibility for many kinds of sources. The MLA also specifies alternate citation and referencing via footnotes or endnotes, which is a more informal version of the formal in-text citation and works cited system. Additionally, the MLA also provides specifications for paper format or layout (particularly for course papers, theses and dissertations, and paper drafts submitted to journals).


2 In-text citations

Within the body of a paper or text, the in-text citation is a brief identifier for the source that is used. Works are cited within the text of a paper with author name(s) and page numbers in parentheses, or the author name(s) stated directly in the sentence with pages in parentheses. Usually only surnames (family names or last names) are given (but see below for more complex cases). If no author name is available, the title or a shortened form of the title can be given instead, and if no page number is available, other data may be provided instead, or the page numbers can be omitted if they are not relevant.

  • At least one recent text by Smith (45) has addressed this issue …
  • At least one recent text (Smith 45) has addressed this issue …
  • A recent survey (Nevalainen and Traugott) notes that ...
  • A recent survey by Nevalainen and Traugott notes that ...

The in-text citation goes inside the sentence, and if it comes at the end, it still is placed before final punctuation (inside a final period, that is, the period comes after the closing parenthesis of the citation). If the author's name is part of the sentence, the page number can appear after the author name or at the end of the sentence.

Conversation analysis began as an attempt to study how speakers organize talk and thereby organize their social interaction (Schlegloff 102).

As Schlegloff (102) described the paradigm, conversation analysis began as an attempt to study how speakers organize talk and thereby organize their social interaction.

As Schlegloff described the paradigm, conversation analysis began as an attempt to study how speakers organize talk and thereby organize their social interaction (102).

2.1 Author details

Multiple citations
For citing multiple sources together, each entry is separated by a semi-colon, and they are ordered alphabetically according to the first author.

The phenomenon has been characterized variously as a social malady, and as a symptom of a deeper problem (Jones 46; Smith 98).

The methodology of conversation analysis was pioneered by applied linguists, including the transcription and notation system, and the basic categories and terminology for types of initiation, turn taking, and repair (Sacks et al. 1974; Schlegloff 1973).

Multiple author works
For two authors, both authors' surnames are provided, either in the sentence or in the parenthetical citation. Ampersands (&) are not used in MLA in parenthetical citations.

His exposition has been described as simultaneously mind-bending and heretical, yet sublimely orthodox (Smith 325; Treu 973).

One of the earliest linguistic studies of conversational closings by Schlegloff and Sacks explored the ambiguities of demarcating such interchanges.

One of the earliest linguistic studies of conversational closings (Schlegloff and Sacks) explored the ambiguities of demarcating such interchanges.

For works with three or more authors, the citation is abbreviated by citing only the first author followed by et al. (Latin et alia = "and others"). The full list of names is provided in the works cited.

The methodology of conversation analysis was pioneered by applied linguists, including the transcription and notation system, and the basic categories and terminology for types of initiation, turn taking, and repair (Sacks et al. 1974; Schlegloff 1973).

Multiple works by the same author
The titles of the works are shorted as needed and included in the parenthetical citation, e.g., ...Author ("Title" 10)... or ... (Author, "Title" 10). Books and other stand-alone or independent works are italicized as they normally would be, and articles and other shorter works appear in quotes. Normal rules of capitalization apply, i.e., title case (see below), where all major or longer words are capitalized.

While Smith has categorized Kierkegaard's different levels of belief into different levels or qualitative types ("Kierkegaard's Differing Categories" 883), in her more recent work she has explored the connection between his existential and religious belief (Smith, "Reconciling Existential Belief" 256).

Authors with same names
Sources by different authors with the same surnames can be distinguished with initialized first names.

While some view Johnson's presidency in a rather negative light (A. Lee 13), others emphasize the pragmatic approach he took to certain problems (C. Lee 89).


2.2 Other source types

Classic works with multiple editions
Some classic works may exist in different editions, with varying subdivisions. To clarify, after the page number and a semi-colon in the in-text citation, further identifying information can be provided to specify a particular volume (vol.), book (bk.), part (pt.), chapter (ch.), section (sec.), or paragraph (par.). This is further clarified with specific information for the particular edition used in the works cited section.

Such ethical principles were described as categorical imperatives (Kant 204; pt. 2).

Multi-volume works
A volume number and colon precedes the page number.

Augustine describes his mystical experience in relatively logical terms that show a relatively restrained emotionality (1: 5-12).

Religious texts
The particular version of the Bible or other text is indicated the first time it is cited, but this can be omitted in subsequent citations. Books of the Bible are abbreviated.

The writer of the book used awkward Greek, literally, "the was," translated as “who was" in the famous phrase, "who was and who is who is to come"he who was" (New Revised Standard Version, Rev. 1:8), while such formulations are avoided in other books ascribed to the same writer, such as the famous "In the beginning" passage (Jn. 1).

Audiovisual media materials
For media materials with a runtime, such as films, videos, podcasts, and TV shows, an exact time reference or time range can be provided instead of page numbers, in hour:minute:seconds format, e.g., (00:04:30-00:06:45).


Online, electronic, and media materials
The first relevant item is provided from the MLA works cited template is provided. For online sources, it is not necessary to provide paragraph, page or section numbers in the in-text citation. URLs are not needed, but a domain suffix is included if needed, e.g., CNN.com, Economist.com. Care must be used to make sure the website or material is credible and worth citing in an academic paper.
  • Template: (Author / Contributor name, Article title, Website name, Film name)

Multiple sources by the same author (or producer or other contributor) can be distinguished with a title or shortened title in quotation marks.

While a significant decline in story-telling technique was apparent in the first prequel (Lucas, "Phantom Menace"), this became painfully serious by the conclusion of the prequel trilogy (Lucas, "Revenge of the Sith").

Secondary citation
It may be necessary sometimes to cite a source that you do not have direct access to, but it is cited in another source. When possible, the original source should be found and consulted, but if it is unavailable, the "qtd. in" is used to cite the source that you actually found it in.

An older study found that 80% of stressed words in a corpus were nouns, followed by 12% verbs, and 8% other word classes (Smith, qtd. in Jones 404).

An older study by Smith found that 80% of stressed words in a corpus were nouns, followed by 12% verbs, and 8% other word classes (qtd. in Jones 404).


For verbs used in paraphrasing, see the page on reporting verbs (introduction) and the detailed listing on the page for reporting verbs.

2.3 Quotations

A short quotation contains fewer than four lines of text or three lines of verse, and it is included directly in the paragraph. Short quotations are enclosed in quotation marks, with an author and specific page citation, or line numbers for verses. Lines of verse are separated by slash marks (/) with a space before and after the slash mark.

The guide takes a unique view of cosmology with this bold statement: "In the beginning the Universe was created. This has made a lot of people very angry and has been widely regarded as a bad move" (Adams 5).

Moore described the character in his song rather movingly: "Long ago, in another galaxy / There lived a gloomy robot / His name was Marvin" (1-3).

Long quotations (more than four lines of text or three lines of verse) are placed in a separate block paragraph without quotation marks. The line breaks and formatting of poetry and verse are retained as much as possible. The in-text citation in block paragraphs comes after the closing punctuation. The entire block paragraph is indented 1.25 cm (0.5 inches) from the left margin. In proper MLA format, the block quotation is double-spaced like the main text (especially for a course paper, thesis, dissertation, or journal manuscript), though printed journals, periodicals and books may use single-spacing format for everything.

  Long quotations
1 The short story masterfully captures the mental anguish of our "antagonist" fiend:

And still the men chatted pleasantly, and smiled. Was it possible they heard not? Almighty God! --no, no! They heard! --they suspected! --they knew! --they were making a mockery of my horror!-this I thought, and this I think. But anything was better than this agony! Anything was more tolerable than this derision! I could bear those hypocritical smiles no longer! I felt that I must scream or die! and now --again! --hark! louder! louder! louder! louder!

"Villains!" I shrieked, "dissemble no more! I admit the deed! --tear up the planks! here, here! --It is the beating of his hideous heart!" (Poe 98)

2 One of the most iconic poem openings comes from the hand of Poe:

Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered, weak and weary,
Over many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore—
    While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping,
As of some one gently rapping, rapping at my chamber door.
“’Tis some visitor,” I muttered, “tapping at my chamber door—
            Only this and nothing more.” (202)


In a quotation, necessary explanations or additions of your own inside the quotation can be included in square brackets, and words that you have omitted are indicated with an ellipsis ( . . . ), with each period preceded and followed by a space. If omitting a line from a poem, the ellipsis dots should extend to the complete line of a poem.

The suspense builds as the killer grows anxious: "... still the men [the investigators] chatted pleasantly, and smiled . . . they were making a mockery of my horror" (Poe 98).


3 Works Cited

The MLA 8th edition specifies a general template, which offers the flexibility for citing any kind of source in the works cited section. The MLA 8 uses the concept of source and container to consolidate a number of possible types of works into a more manageable framework. A source is a smaller unit, such as an article, essay short story, or section within a larger work. The larger work is the container, such as a journal, a book, an anthology, a collection, or a series of materials.

A works cited entry can include the following components, depending on the type of source - the types of elements that are relevant and that are known[2]. Each of these elements is followed by the punctuation mark shown here.

  1. Author.
  2. Title of source.
  3. Title of container,
  4. Other contributors,
  5. Version,
  6. Number,
  7. Publisher,
  8. Publication date,
  9. Location.


3.1 Format

The Works Cited section begins on a separate page, and is usually double-spaced (at least in course papers, manuscripts, theses, and dissertations). Entries are not numbered, but each entry is hanging indented 1.25 cm (0.5 inches), that is, the first line aligns with the left margin, and subsequent lines of the entry are indented. In MS Word, right-click for paragraph properties, and for paragraph format, chose handing indent, and use the default 1.25 cm (1/2 inch) setting. In LibreOffice, edit the paragraph properties or bibliography format properties; manually create a 1.25 cm text indent, and a -1.25 cm reverse indent for the first line.

Each word is capitalized in titles of works, except for minor words (articles, prepositions, conjunctions); the first word of a title is capitalized. Larger works are italicized (not underlined), such as book, journals, periodicals, and names of websites, film titles, and names of TV series. Shorter works (such as sources within a container) are indicated with quotes, e.g., titles of articles, essays, and poems. Entries are listed alphabetically by first author or title.

3.2 Template elements

This is the general template or format for any citation; this includes information for a second, larger container, or reissue / republication, and other complex cases, after the primary source information.

Author. Source title. Title of container, Other contributors (translators or editors), Version (edition), Number (vol. and/or no.), Publisher, Publication date, Location (pages, paragraphs, URL, or DOI). 2nd container title, Other contributors, Version, Number, Publisher, Publication date, Location, Date of Access (if applicable).


3.2.1 Author

The entry begins with the author's surname and the rest of the name as indicated in the work.

Taylor, John R. Cognitive Grammar. Oxford University Press, 2002.

Multiple authors
For multiple authors, the first author is in surname, first name format, while the other author names are in normal first name, last name order.

Swales, John M., and Christine B. Feak. Academic Writing for Graduate Students, 3rd ed. University of Michigan, 2012.

For three or more authors, MLA offers the option of abbreviating the entry by giving the first author's name followed by "et al." (Latin, "and others").

Lilienfield, Scott O., et al. 50 Great Myths of Popular Psychology." Wiley Blackwell, 2010.

Group, organization, or corporate author
The entity name can serve as an author name.

National Research Council. How People Learn. National Academy Press, 2000.

However, if the group author is the same as the publisher, it is treated as an authorless work, and the entry starts with the title.

Annual Report of the American Psychological Association. American Psychological Association, 2014.

Multiple works by the same author
Works are listed alphabetically by title, and the author name is only given for the first entry of multiple entries by the very same author(s); the name in subsequent entries is replaced with three hyphens and a period. In the in-text citation, these are distinguished by giving the author name and a short version of the title in parentheses.

Zhou, Mara. "Analysis of Martian Compound Verbs. Extraterrestrial Linguistics, vol. 14, no. 1, 2004, pp. 28-132.

- - -. (2003). Aspects of Venutian Verb Morphology. Journal of Exobiology and Linguistics vol. 5, no. 1, pp. 11-15.

Authorless or anonymous work
As above, the entry starts with the title of the work.

Guide for New Teachers. Center for Teaching and Learning, Midwestern University, 2015.


3.2.2 Source title

Books are italicized, while most other sources are in quotation marks, such as the title of an article, a web article or post, or a song title.

Dreyfus, Hubert, and Jane Rubin. "Kierkegaard on the Nihilism of the Present Age: The Case of Commitment as Addiction." Synthese 98.1. 1994, pp. 3-19.

Journey. "Don't Stop Believin'" Escape, Columbia Studios, 1981.

Kierkegaard, Soren. The Sickness unto Death. Translated by Walter Lowrie. 1941.

Mooney, Edward F. Selves in Discord and Resolve: Kierkegaard's Moral-religious Psychology from Either/or to Sickness Unto Death. Psychology Press, 1996.


3.2.3 Container title

A container is a larger work or a major work. The container title is usually capitalized and often followed by a comma and further description or details about the container. Examples include journals, periodicals, anthologies, edited volumes, website names, albums, TV series, and others.

Bad dream house. The Simpsons, created by Matt Groening. 20th Century Fox Television, 1990.

Journey. "Don't Stop Believin'" Escape, Columbia Studios, 1981.

Pullum, Geoffrey K. The Great Eskimo Vocabulary Hoax and Other Irreverent Essays on the Study of Language. University of Chicago Press, 1991.

Occasionally a container might belong to a larger container, such as a TV series available through a video service, or a journal in a database (examples source: Purdue Owl website).

“94 Meetings.” Parks and Recreation, season 2, episode 21, NBC, 29 Apr. 2010. Netflix, www.netflix.com/watch/70152031?trackId=200256157&tctx=0%2C20%2C0974d361-27cd-44de-9c2a-2d9d868b9f64-12120962.

Langhamer, Claire. “Love and Courtship in Mid-Twentieth-Century England.” Historical Journal, vol. 50, no. 1, 2007, pp. 173-96. ProQuest, doi:10.1017/S0018246X06005966. Accessed 27 May 2009.


3.2.4 Other contributors

Other relevant contributors to a work are listed after the title of the work, which also help identify the type of work. These terms are not abbreviated in MLA 8.

  • Editor, Editors, Translated by / Translator, Illustrator / Illustrated by, Created by, Produced by, Directed by ...

Kafka, Franz. The Trial, Translated by Mike Mitchell, Oxford University Press, 2009.

Morton, Ann. "Lecturing to Large Groups." A Handbook for Teaching and Learning in Higher Education, edited by Heather Fry, Steve Ketteridge and Stephanie Marshall. 3rd ed., Routledge, 2009.


3.2.5 Version

Information on different versions and editions follows next.

The Bible. New Revised Standard Version. American Bible Society, 1989.

Morton, Ann. "Lecturing to Large Groups." A Handbook for Teaching and Learning in Higher Education, edited by Heather Fry, Steve Ketteridge and Stephanie Marshall. 3rd ed., Routledge, 2009.


3.2.6 Number

This includes information about volumes of a multi-volume work, volumes and issue numbers of journals and periodicals. In MLA 8, the abbreviations "vol." and "no." indicate volumes and issue numbers, particularly for journals. This is in contrast to the style seen in previous MLA versions and other citation systems; e.g., "vol. 53, no. 2" in MLA 8 is equivalent to 53.8, 53:8, or 53(8) in other systems.

Schegloff, Emanuel A.; Jefferson, Gail; Sacks, Harvey. “The Preference for Self-Correction in the Organization of Repair in Conversation.” Language, vol. 53, no. 2, 1977, pp. 361–382.

Søren Kierkegaard's Journals and Papers, translated by Howard and Edna Hong, 2:1132. Indiana University Press, 1967-1978).


3.2.7 Publisher

This includes the relevant publisher or distributor for books, films, TV series, art pieces, media companies, and others. Publisher information is not needed for periodicals, journals, self-published works, websites with the same name as the creator or publisher, or web sites that make works available but do not actually produce or publish them (e.g., YouTube, EBSCO, JSTOR, WordPress, Google Scholar).

Bad dream house. The Simpsons, created by Matt Groening. 20th Century Fox Television, 1990.

Griffiths, Sandra. "Teaching and Learning in Small Groups." A Handbook for Teaching and Learning in Higher Education, edited by Heather Fry, Steve Ketteridge and Stephanie Marshall. 3rd ed., Routledge, 2009.

Klee, Paul. Twittering Machine. 1922. Museum of Modern Art, New York. The Artchive, www.artchive.com/artchive/K/klee/twittering_machine.jpg.html. Accessed May 2006.


3.2.8 Publication date

Multiple dates may be possible, and the most relevant one for you should be used. A TV episode could be referenced by the year of production, but if the original air date is relevant, that could be used as well.

Bad dream house. The Simpsons, created by Matt Groening. 20th Century Fox Television, 1990.

Bad dream house. The Simpsons, created by Matt Groening. 20th Century Fox Television, 25 Oct. 1990.

Undated works
The abbreviation "n.d." for "no date" is used in place of a date in the works cited entry.

Zhou, Mara. Dictionary of North Martian. BBC Press, n.d.

Online sources

For an online source, it is recommended that you indicate the date when you accessed the material, since online works may change or move over time. The access date is a separate optional element after the location / locus information.

"Why do the Humanities Matter?" Stanford Humanities Center, Stanford University, n.d. shc.stanford.edu/why-do-humanities-matter. Accessed 02 Jan. 2017.

Reprints
A reprinted work could have two relevant dates, especially if reprinted by a different publisher.

Gildersleeve, Basil L., and Lodge, Gonzales. Gildersleeve's Latin Grammar. 1903. Dover, 2009.

Abbreviations
When giving a specific date, most months are abbreviated (except for May, June, July), and are thus written like this.
  • Jan., Feb., Mar., Apr., June, July, Aug., Sept., Oct., Nov., Dec.


3.2.9 Locus or location

For print sources, location refers to the locus of the information in the text, i.e., page numbers of an article, or the pages that are cited in the text. Journal and periodical articles should include page numbers for the article. For some media, a physical location can be provided, e.g., where a piece of artwork is shown.

Klee, Paul. Twittering Machine. 1922. Museum of Modern Art, New York. The Artchive, www.artchive.com/artchive/K/klee/twittering_machine.jpg.html. Accessed May 2006.

Schegloff, Emanuel A.; Jefferson, Gail; Sacks, Harvey. “The Preference for Self-Correction in the Organization of Repair in Conversation.” Language, vol. 53, no. 2, 1977, pp. 361–382.

The city and/or country where a book or other work was published is no longer required for most works in MLA 8 (but MLA 7 did require this). However, this location is necessary for works before 1900, since older works were usually associated with the city of publication; in fact, the city information can substitute for the publisher.

Gray, Henry. Anatomy: Descriptive and Surgical. London, 1858.


3.2.9.1 DOIs and URLs

For electronic sources, a locator may be required - either a URL or a DOI number. If a journal article is referenced which is also published regularly in print, then no URL is needed, but a DOI should be given, if available. Otherwise, a URL is needed or recommended if the source is mainly electronic, such as online-only journals, electronic books, and other online media. The URL prefix http:// is left out. It is recommended that you also include the date when you accessed the material, especially for sources whose content or URL might change.

It is increasingly common to see DOI (digital object identifier) numbers for journal articles for international journals, increasingly for smaller regional and national journals, and for some academic books in electronic or online forms. This is a permanent link to the online version; a publisher might change the actual URL of an article, but a DOI is a permanent link to the article regardless of URL changes. Thus, if a DOI is available, it should be used instead of a URL, particularly for international journals, and a DOI can also be used instead of a URL for an online journal. As with URLs, no period is used at the end of a DOI, and the DOI follows the format of doi:xx.xxx/xxxxxxx without the http:// prefix. Since DOIs are permanent, an access date is unnecessary.

Austin, Ann E. "Preparing the Next Generation of Faculty: Graduate School as Socialization to the Academic Career." Journal of Higher Education, 73.1, pp. 94-122.

"Renegade octopus escapes tank into drainhole." News Web Site. 28 May 2016, www.newswebsite.com/world/asia/20160528. Accessed 15 November 2016.

Weiss, Carin. S. "The development of professional role commitment among graduate students." Human Relations, vol. 34.1, pp. 13–31. doi:10.1177/001872678103400102.


4 Types of sources

Various types of works are described here, particularly for works cited entries.

4.1 Books

The basic book template is as follows. In MLA 8, commas are used between Publisher, Publication Date, and Page numbers; periods are used between Containers, and Container titles are italicized for books and other major works. It is not necessary to explicitly identify print versus electronic sources as in MLA 7.

Surname, First-name. Book title. Publisher, Publication date.

Mooney, Edward F. Selves in Discord and Resolve: Kierkegaard's Moral-religious Psychology from Either/or to Sickness Unto Death. Psychology Press, 1996.

Anthology, collection, or edited volume (entire work)
To cite the entire work, rather than just a single article or item, the editor(s) are listed as the author(s).

Walker, Marilyn A., Aravind K. Joshi, and Ellen F. Prince, editors. Centering Theory in Discourse. Oxford University Press, 1998.

Anthology, collection, or edited volume (single article or item)
To cite a single article, essay, poem, chapter, or item in such a collection, the following template can be use.

Surname, First name. "Title (of Article, Essay, Item, etc.)." Title of Collection, edited by Editor Name(s), Publisher, Year, Page(s).

For example:

Grosz, Barbara, and Yael Ziv. “Centering, Global Focus, and Right Dislocation.” Centering Theory in Discourse. Oxford University Press, 1998, pp. 293–308.

Poe, Edgar Allen. "The Murders in the Rue Morgue." Complete Stories and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe. Doubleday, 1966, pp. 2-26.

If you reference more than one article (or essay or piece) from the same collection, MLA indicates you may cross-reference the works with an entry for the whole work. The whole work is referenced according to the editor(s), and abbreviated entries for specific pieces can be listed separately, citing the author(s) (as applicable) and title of the piece, the editor surname(s), and page numbers. All the entries are alphabetized as separate entries. In the following examples, the last entry is the basic reference[3].

L'Eplattenier, Barbara. "Finding Ourselves in the Past: An Argument for Historical Work on WPAs." Rose and Weiser, pp. 131-40.

Peeples, Tim. "'Seeing' the WPA With/Through Postmodern Mapping." Rose and Weiser, pp. 153-67.

Rose, Shirley K., and Irwin Weiser, editors. The Writing Program Administrator as Researcher. Heinemann, 1999.

Authorless or anonymous works

Annual Report of the American Psychological Association. American Psychological Association, 2014.

Guide for New Teachers. Center for Teaching and Learning, Midwestern University, 2015.

Edited volume
See under Anthology above.


Editions
Subsequent editions of a book

Swales, John M., and Christine B. Feak. Academic Writing for Graduate Students, 3rd ed. University of Michigan, 2012.

Editor / redactor

18 Best Stories by Edgar Allan Poe. Edited by Vincent Price and Chandler Brossard. Dell, 1965.

Group author
For groups, organizations, agencies, corporations, and other such entities.

National Research Council. How People Learn. National Academy Press, 2000.

Multiple authors
Two authors can be listed (second author in first name, last name format); for three or more authors, the abbreviation "et al." can be used.

Lilienfield, Scott O., et al. 50 Great Myths of Popular Psychology." Wiley Blackwell, 2010.

Swales, John M., and Christine B. Feak. Academic Writing for Graduate Students, 3rd edition. University of Michigan, 2012.

Online or electronic books
It is not necessary in MLA 8 to indicate the electronic version of a book, but a DOI should be provided if available; otherwise, a URL should be given. Use the phrase, “Accessed” instead of listing the date or the abbreviation, “n.d.".

The Oxford handbook of Spinoza. Oxford University Press, n.d. www.oxfordhandbooks.com/view/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780195335828.001.0001/oxfordhb-9780195335828. Accessed 28 Nov. 2016.

Reprints and republished books
The date of the original and the republication can be given, especially if republished by a different company.

Gildersleeve, Basil L., and Lodge, Gonzales. Gildersleeve's Latin Grammar. 1903. Dover, 2009.

Translated book
The book entry is normally like other book entries, but with the translator's name after the book title (first version). However, if you want to emphasize the translated work, the particular translation, or the translator's work, the translator's name could come first (second version).

Kierkegaard, Soren. The Sickness unto Death. Translated by Walter Lowrie. 1941.

Lowrie, Walter, translator. The Sickness unto Death. By Søren Kierkegaard.






5 References and notes


5.1 Other pages on referencing / citation systems and source use