Basic Rules for In-Text Citations:
Need more help? This pdf has clear, easy to understand examples!
When you directly quote an author, include the author's name and the page number of the quotation.
Examples*:
1. (Author's name in text)
It may be true, as Robertson maintains, that "in the appreciation of medieval art the attitude of the observer is of primary importance..." (136).
2. (Author's name in reference)
It may be true that "in the appreciation of medieval art the attitude of the observer is of primary importance..." (Robertson 136).
Remember to provide a full bibliographic entry of the author's work on your works cited page.
*Examples excerpted from: Modern Language Association. MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers. 7th ed. New York: Modern Language Assoc. of America, 2009. Print.
Paraphrasing or summarizing an author's ideas in your own words is perfectly acceptable as long as you acknowledge the original author, and clearly define the boundary between that author's ideas and your own ideas.
Examples*:
1. (Single author)
In his Autobiography, Benjamin Franklin states that he prepared a list of thirteen virtues (135-37).
2. (Two authors)
Others, like Jakobson and Waugh (210-15), hold the opposite point of view.
Remember to provide a full bibliographic entry of the author's work on your works cited page.
*Examples excerpted from: Modern Language Association. MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers. 7th ed. New York: Modern Language Assoc. of America, 2009. Print.
Sometimes you may need to use information cited in another source. For example, a text by Boswell that you found quotes something written by Johnson. There are two possible ways of handling it. You can:
Example*:
Samuel Johnson admitted that Edmund Burke was an "extraordinary man" (qtd. in Boswell 2: 450).
You would only need to list the work by Boswell, not Johnson, in your references page, since this is the author you have read.
*Example excerpted from: Modern Language Association. MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers. 7th ed. New York: Modern Language Assoc. of America, 2009. Print.
Citing a web-based source within text can be tricky because a website may provide neither a page number nor an author. In this scenario, you can do the following:
Example:
Though 2500 scientists were signatories to the IPCC, and the report, released in 2007, was heralded widely as a document that would change U.S. climate policy ("The Scientists Speak"), policy has not developed since then.
The entry on the Works Cited page would be alphabetized by its title:
"The Scientists Speak." Editorial. New York Times. New York Times, 20 Nov. 2007. Web. 3 January 2013.