Spacing
In MLA style, the works-cited page is double spaced, with the same spacing within and between citations.
Order
Citations beginning with names and those beginning with titles are to be alphabetized together. Numbers in titles are treated as though they have been spelled out. For names, alphabetize based on the letters that come before the comma separating the last name from the first, and disregard any spaces or other punctuation in the last name. For titles, ignore articles such as "a" and "the" (and equivalents in other languages) for alphabetization purposes.
What to include
The title "Works Cited" indicates that the list you provide contains only the works you actually cite in your paper. If you wish to also include in your list works that you consult but do not cite, give your page the broader title "Works Consulted."
Works Cited
Alvarez, Gloria. "Teacher Recalls Land of Rising Sun; Audience Hears Tales of Japan."East New Orleans Picayune 14 Oct. 2001: 4. Print.
Burgum, Edwin Berry, ed. The New Criticism: An Anthology of Modern Aesthetics and Literary Criticism. New York: Prentice-Hall, 1930. Print.
Camus, Albert. The Stranger. Trans. Stuart Gilbert. New York: A. A. Knopf, 1946. Print.
Cassatt, Mary. Mother and Child. Wichita Art Museum, Wichita. American Painting: 1560-1913. By John Pearce. New York: McGraw, 1964. Slide 22. Print.
Day, Nancy, and Alec Foege. "Geisha Guy: Arthur Golden Isn't Japanese, and He Isn't a Woman. But He Does a Brilliant Impersonation in His Smash First Novel." People Weekly23 Nov. 1998: 89. Print.
Delaroche, Paul. Portrait of a Woman. 1829. European Drawings from the Collection of the Ackland Art Museum. By Carol C. Gillham and Carolyn H. Wood. Chapel Hill: The Museum, University of North Carolina, 2001. 93.
Falk, Thomas H. "Herland." Masterplots II. Women's Literature Series. Ed. Frank N. Magill. Vol. 3. Pasadena: Salem, 1995. 1022-1030. Print.
"Gardening Experts Give Insights on Plants that Grow Well Here." Pittsburgh Post-Gazette28 Apr. 2002. LexisNexis Academic. Web. 15 Oct. 2002. <http://eresources.lib.unc.edu/eid/description.php?EIDID=12>.
Gigli. Screenplay by Martin Brest. Dir. Martin Brest. Perf. Ben Affleck, Jennifer Lopez, and Christopher Walken. Columbia, 2003. Film.
Gill, Brendan. "B.C. to A.D." The New Yorker 58.13 (17 May 1982): 110-115. Print. Rpt. in "Athol Fugard." Contemporary Literary Criticism. Ed. Jean C. Stine. Vol. 25. Detroit: Gale Research, 1983. 173-178.
Haas, Stephanie. "Introduction to Database Concepts and Applications." School of Information and Library Science. U. of NC at Chapel Hill, Jan.-May 2007. Web. 16 Apr. 2009. <http://www.ils.unc.edu/~stephani/dbsp07/home.html>.
Hirota, Akiko. "The Tale of Gengi: From Heian Classic to Heisei Comic." Journal of Popular Culture 31.2 (Fall 1997): 29-68. Print.
Iko, Momoko. "Gold Watch." Unbroken Thread: An Anthology of Plays by Asian American Women. Ed. Roberta Uno. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1993. 105-154. Print.
Ishiguro, Kazuo. The Remains of the Day. Boston: Faber, 1989. Print.
Kincaid, Jason. "The Sorry State of Online Privacy." TechCrunch. N.p., 26 Apr. 2009. Web. 28 Apr. 2009. <http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/04/26/the-sorry-state-of-online-privacy/>.
John's First Birthday Party. Personal photography by Lisa Newman. May 22, 2009.
Motley, Archibald John, Jr. Mending Socks. 1924. Oil on canvas. Ackland Art Museum, Chapel Hill, NC. ARTstor. 30 No. 2010, <http://www.artstor.org>
"Once a Jerk, Always a Jerk - and the Whole Town Loves Him." The Charlotte Observer 8 Oct. 2002: 10A. Print.
Reider, Noriko T. "The Appeal of Kaidan Tales of the Strange." Asian Folklore Studies59.2 (2000): 265-284. Academic Search Premier. Web. 6 Feb. 2002. <http://eresources.lib.unc.edu/eid/description.php?resourceID=1265>.
Willett, Perry, ed. Victorian Women Writers Project. Indiana U., Apr. 1997. Web. 16 Apr. 2009. <http://www.indiana.edu/~letrs/vwwp/>.
Windholz, Anne M. "An Emigrant and a Gentleman: Imperial Masculinity, British Magazines, and the Colony That Got Away." Victorian Studies 42.4 (1999/2000): 631-658. Project Muse. Web. 27 Feb. 2002. <http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/victorian_studies/v042/42.4windholz.pdf>.
This was a good example of how to use an MLA citation correctly. in the beginning it tells you what you will need to do a MLA citation and what order they should be in. the link also described what sort of spacing to use and punctuation. this information helped me correct my paper. library 10 is moderately helpful. they give you plenty of examples. having to teach yourself is not easy though. some of the videos they wanted me to watch online didn't work, so i had to guess. library 10 shouldn't be required, it is a really hard thing to keep up with while in your regular English class.
Thanks for the feedback, but do you realize that without the signal phrase attributing these "cut and paste" paragraphs, you are committing plagiarism, which was an important part of this assignment? Please add the attribution (signal phrase) in which you tell the audience where the cut and pasted information came from. Also, what kind of online sources. You need to determine what type in order to format both the in-text citation and the Works Cited page.Thank you!
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