This guide is a quick introduction to the MLA 9th edition citation style. MLA is a citation style developed by the Modern Language Association and is primarily used in the Humanities.
Video from CSU Dominguez Hills University Library.
In-text citations are the short citations in parentheses that you will include in the body of your paper or assignment. They appear at the end of a sentence or paragraph in which you have either directly quoted or paraphrased an outside source.
(Last Name Page Number)
If you mention the author's name in the sentence or paragraph, you can omit the author's name and only include the page number. If a source does not have page numbers, such as a webpage, you may skip the page number.
"Culture forms our beliefs" (Anzaldúa 38).
According to Anzaldúa, "culture forms our beliefs" (38).
(Last Name Page Number)
(Anzaldúa 30)
(First Author's Last Name and Second Author's Last Name Page Number)
(Wykes and Gunter 53)
(First Author's Last Name et al. Page Number)
(Chan et al. 97)
(Group Name Page Number)
(Calgary Educational Partnership Foundation 230)
If your full citation for a group author starts with the title rather than the group's name, follow the "No Author" in-text citation rules instead.
(Title of Longer Work or "Title of Shorter Work" Page Number)
(Fair Housing 15)
("How to Teach")
For more guidelines and examples, check out the Purdue OWL In-Text Citation Guide.
Your Works Cited list will appear at the end of your paper or project, and will contain a list of citations in alphabetical order corresponding to the in-text citations you used in the body of your project. Each citation will include the complete publication information for that source, so that anyone may find and check the sources.
The format for your citations will differ depending on the type of source you are citing. Please select your source type below for detailed instructions.
Not sure what type of source you're trying to cite? Check out How to Identify Source Types.
Not sure what type of source you're trying to cite? Check out How to Identify Source Types.
For detailed instructions on how to format your paper in MLA 9th style, please visit Formatting Your Paper.
This guide is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Content is adapted from the CSUDH MLA Citation Guide and the Columbia College (BC) MLA Citation Guide. Icons courtesy of Icons8.