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Citation Resources

MLA, APA, Chicago, Government Documents... Citing sources can be confusing until you get the hang of it. This guide is here to help.

MLA Style Basics Rules

MLA Style uses parenthetical citations, so that citation information is often, though not always, included in parentheses. The basic format is to put the author's surname and, if available, the location of the information, which could be a page number or line number, for example. It will be included in the sentence after the information you want to cite, often at the end of the sentence before the punctuation.

Let's look at an example. We want to cite this scholarly article in the text. The author is "Farrah Bara," so we would cite the surname "Bara." The publication date is the year 2019. So a parenthetical citation would look like this:

Parenthetical Citation

The 1978 consent degree between the City of Memphis and its citizens is a useful example of how protect First Amendment rights (Bara).

It's worth noting that "the successful protection of protesters in Memphis—made without reliance on the Constitution—indicates that other legal solutions exist" (Bara 203).

There is an alternative way to format an in-text citation in MLA, called a prose citation. In a prose citation, the author or title is written into your sentence so they are part of your prose. If needed, the location will still be in parentheses at the end of the sentence. 

Here is an example of a prose citation for the same source from above:

Prose Citation

Bara remarks that "the successful protection of protesters in Memphis—made without reliance on the Constitution—indicates that other legal solutions exist" (203).

MLA Style Basic Rules is adapted from Tigers Write: Why and How to Cite with MLA by the University of Memphis Center for Writing & Communication and University Libraries and is licensed CC BY 4.0.

MLA calls the complete list of works cited at the end of a paper with all the information needed to get access to them the Works Cited page. Each citation entry in the Works Cited requires a few basic elements: author, title of source, and the elements of the container of the source. Each element tells you something important about the cited source. If the element you are looking for isn't present, then skip it.

Elements of an MLA Works Cited Page Citation
  • Author.
  • Title.
  • Title of Container,
  • Contributors,
  • Version,
  • Number,
  • Publisher,
  • Publication date,
  • Location.

Let's look at the elements that make up the MLA citation for this scholarly article:

Bara, Farrah. “From Memphis, With Love: A Model to Protect Protesters in the Age of Surveillance.” Duke Law Journal, vol. 69, no. 1, 2019, pp. 197–229.

  • Author: Farrah Barra.
  • Title of Source: From Memphis, with Love: A Model to Protect Protesters in the Age of Surveillance.
  • Container: Duke Law Journal,
  • Version: 69
  • Number: 1
  • Date: 2019. 
  • Location: pp. 197–229. 
MLA Style Basic Rules is adapted from Tigers Write: Why and How to Cite with MLA by the University of Memphis Center for Writing & Communication and University Libraries and is licensed CC BY 4.0.

MLA Citation Resources for the 9th Edition

MLA Citation Resources for the 8th edition