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9.6.1.1.1: Citations and Formatting Guide for Literature (MLA)

  • Page ID
    318997
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    • 9.6.1.1.1.1: Avoiding Plagiarism Through Ethical Attribution
      This page discusses plagiarism, highlighting its definition as the unauthorized use of others' ideas or words, which violates academic integrity and can result in severe penalties. It emphasizes the importance of creating original work, seeking assistance, and properly citing sources to avoid plagiarism. Ethical attribution techniques, such as in-text citations and a Works Cited page, enhance credibility and clarify ideas.
    • 9.6.1.1.1.2: What is MLA?
      This page outlines the significance of formatting and citation norms in academic writing, which help establish a professional identity and ensure clear communication. Different fields adhere to specific guidelines, including APA for sciences, Chicago/Turabian for history and law, and MLA for Humanities. The MLA, founded in 1883, plays a key role in guiding the study of languages and literatures while providing a style guide to improve academic writing quality.
    • 9.6.1.1.1.3: Formatting a Literature Essay (MLA)
      This page offers a guide on MLA essay formatting, highlighting its significance for professionalism and instructor readability. It outlines formatting requirements like paper size, margins, font type, headers, and titles. Additionally, the guide features an example of a well-structured MLA essay centered on Edgar Allan Poe's "The Fall of the House of Usher," which analyzes themes of hopelessness through imagery and reflections.
    • 9.6.1.1.1.4: MLA Works Cited page
      This page covers the essentials of creating a Works Cited page for literature essays, emphasizing the distinction between primary and secondary sources. It provides examples of citing works from anthologies in various formats and outlines guidelines for both short and long works. Students are encouraged to use citation tools with caution, ensuring accuracy by consulting the MLA style guide. An example Works Cited page demonstrates correct formatting.
    • 9.6.1.1.1.5: MLA In-Text Citations
      This page emphasizes the importance of MLA-style in-text citations for ethical citation and attribution, linking to a Works Cited page. It discusses the necessity of brief citations placed at the end of quoted or paraphrased material, ensuring they match Works Cited entries to avoid ambiguity and plagiarism.
    • 9.6.1.1.1.6: Quotation, Paraphrase, and Summary
      This page offers guidance on integrating sources in literary essays, focusing on quoting, paraphrasing, and summarizing alongside personal insights. It explains summarizing as condensing ideas, paraphrasing as rewording, and quoting as using exact phrases. It stresses the importance of citation to prevent plagiarism and recommends an 80% original content ratio. Additionally, it highlights the need for in-text citations to align with the Works Cited page.
    • 9.6.1.1.1.7: Integrating Quotations Smoothly (Avoid Floating Quotations)
      This page emphasizes the significance of smoothly integrating quotations into essays to prevent "floating quotations" that confuse readers. It contrasts poorly integrated quotations with effective ones, using examples from Wordsworth's poem to illustrate the impact of seamless integration on clarity and argument support. The discussion highlights that proper integration maintains grammatical structure and clearly differentiates the writer’s voice from the quoted content.

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