MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers. 6th ed. New York: Modern Language Association of America, 2003.
Perkins Reference Desk 808.02 G437 M685 2003
Lilly Ready Reference 808.02 G437 M685 2003
Divinity
Older editions in Music and Law
Updates and details about citing web pages available online.
Students whose professors require MLA style
Scholars writing on literature or languages.
Scholars in the humanities.
MLA style uses in-text parenthetical citations – that is, you document each quote, paraphrase, etc., in the text of your paper, using parentheses. No footnotes are used in this style. Each parenthetical citation refers to a complete citation found in the list of works cited at the end of the paper. Unless otherwise indicated, on-line sources follow the same pattern as print versions.
MLA style includes a complete list of all works cited at the end of the paper. Each parenthetical citation in the text should refer to a work in the list of works cited. Each kind of work is cited in its own way; for details, see the Examples.
For information on electronic sources, try the MLA's homepage or Online! A Reference Guide to Using Internet Sources. For citing government documents, see the University of Nevada's MLA Style Guide or the Montana State University MLA Guide. If you have further questions, consult the Reference Desks at Perkins or Lilly Libraries.