2. A Book with One Author
• Author’s last name, first name. Book Title.
City where published: Publishing
company, year.
• Cather, Willa. O Pioneers! New York: Dover
Publications, 1993.
3. A Book with More than One
Author
• The last name of the first author
mentioned, his/her first name, the first and last
name of the next author mentioned, the first and
last name of the next author mentioned, (etc.)
and the first and last name of the last author
mentioned. Book Title. City where published:
Publishing company, year.
• Bennett, Teresa, Nannette Commander, Carol
Callahan, and Karen Chenard. Passing the
Georgia High School English Language Arts Test.
Raleigh: Contemporary Publishing
Company, 2006.
4. An Article in a Reference Book
• “Name of the article.” Title of the book.
Edition number. Year.
• If the article has an author (very rare, but it
happens), then you start the citation entry
with the author’s last name, first name.
• “Pioneer.” American Heritage Dictionary. 3rd
ed. 1997.
5. A Work in an Anthology
• Author’s last name, first name. “Name of the
work.” Translator’s name (if there is one).
Entire Work. Editor’s name. City where
published: Publisher, Year. Pages.
• O’Connor, Flannery. “The Life You Save May
Be Your Own.” Timeless Voices, Timeless
Themes. Platinum Edition.Ed. Kate Kinsella.
Upper Saddle River: Pearson Prentice
Hall, 2004. 972-982.
6. A Scholarly Journal or Magazine Article
• Author’s last name, first name. “Title of the
article.” Title of the work volume number
(year): page numbers.
• If there is an issue number you put a period
after the volume number ex: 13.4 would
mean volume 13 issue 4.
• Wallis, Claudia, and Sonja Steptoe. “How to
Bring Our Schools out of the Twentieth
Century.” Time 168.25 (2006): 50-56.
7. A Chart or Map
• Title. Description. City where published:
Publisher, Year.
• Missouri. Map. Chicago: Rand, 2000.
• Pioneer Expansion. Chart. Hauppage:
Barron, 1992.
8. Movie
• Title. Director’s name. Performer’s names.
Distributor, year.
• A Raisin in the Sun. Dir. Kenny Leon. Perf.
Sean Combs, SanaaLathan, Audra
McDonald, and PhyliciaRashad. Sony
Pictures, 2008.
9. Television/Radio Program
• “Title of the episode or segment.” Title of the
program. Title of the series, if any. Artist
information, if necessary. Name of the
network. Call letters and city of the local
station (if any). Broadcast date.
• “Yes…but is it Art?” Narr. Morley Safer. Sixty
Minutes. CBS. WCBS, New York. 19 Sept.
1993.
10. Web Source
• Author’s last name, first or company / corporation /
nonprofit who owns the website. “Name of
Webpage.” Name of Website. Company /
corporation / nonprofit name if not already named.
Copyright date or date of last update. Researched
date. <URL>.
• Humma, John. “Literary Terms and Devices.”
American Literature Course Site. Georgia Southern
University. Updated 23 April 2006. Researched 5
August 2008.
<www.georgiasouthern.edu/jhumma/AmeriLit/litd
evices>.
11. Unpublished Source
• Author/speaker’s last name, first. “Name of
unpublished source, if any.” Description.
School connected to, if any. Date.
• Pollock, D’Lee. “American Literature Overview
Notes.” Lecture. Bryan County High School.
11 September 2008.
• Griffith, O. Personal Interview. Georgia
Southern University. 13 November 2008.
12. Reminders
• To properly document sources, you must have in-text
citations and a works cited page.
• In-text citations can be a direct quote or a paraphrased
quote.
• For a direct quote-> Introductory statement: “blah
blah” (Author’s Name #).
• For a paraphrased quote-> Sentence (Author’s name).
• Refer to your MLA notes on your flash drive for all
other questions. For documenting other sources, see
the MLA handbook or
http://www.ccc.commnet.edu/mla/index.shtml
13. Formatting
• 12 point Times New Roman; double-spaced; 1
inch margins all the way around
• If you have Word 2007, set up is a bit
difficult, but there is a great References
toolbar.