Modern Language Association (MLA) Guide to Style
(A copy of the complete MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers is kept at the Reference Desk)
BASIC FORMAT:
1. Use standard sized paper, 8½ X 11 inches.
2. All margins (top, bottom, and sides) should be one inch wide.
3. Type the paper double-spaced.
4. Do not justify the right margin.
5. Indent the first line of each paragraph five spaces.
6. There is no separate title page. On the first page, beginning in the upper left corner, at the margin and one inch from the top of the page, type the following information double spaced:
8. Underline titles of books, names of plays, magazine titles, titles of films, etc.
Example:
Shakespeare's _The Tempest_ is being presented at the College Theatre.
9. Use quotation marks for titles of works published within a larger work: titles of articles, a short story in a collection, poems, chapters of books, etc.
Example:
The issue of air quality was discussed in chapter three, "Today and Tomorrow."
CITING ANOTHER PERSON'S IDEAS OR WORK:
1. Place quotation marks around words and sentences directly quoted.
2. Give credit for ideas you have quoted or paraphrased from an original source by including the author's name and page number from the original source.
Examples:
Jones has been critical of the inhumane treatment of the animals by
cosmetic companies when testing new products (3).
-or-
One critic has stated that "Cosmetic companies
use animals inhumanely in their
new product testing" (Jones 3).
BIBLIOGRAPHIES:
A bibliography includes all the works you have actually cited in your work -- and only
those cited -- and is located at the end of your paper. In MLA style, the preferred name for your
bibliography is Works Cited. Citations are arranged alphabetically, by author, or by title
if there is no author. The first line of each citation begins at the left margin and all additional
lines of the citation are indented five spaces.
Double space each entry; double space between
entries.
Editor
Unknown author
Work in an anthology or collection
Entry in an encyclopedia or dictionary
Magazine
Newspaper
Anonymous
Material with publication information from a printed source
Material with no printed source
Material with publication information from a printed source
Material from electronic journals, electronic newsletters
Electronic text
For additional help in citing electronic sources, see the library's "Guide for Citing Electronic Information."
Revised by A. Daniel, 3/96
Back to the Reference Page
Back to the Library Home Page