Transcription of MLA 8TH ED. CITATIONS - Stewart Library
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MLA 8 ED. TH. CITATIONS . MLA CITATIONS . After you locate sources for your assignment or project and determine that they are relevant for your research, make sure you record all the information that you'll need to cite it in your paper. This section will cover how to cite various types of books, articles, websites, and other electronic resources in MLA (Modern Language Association) 8th edition, which is one of the most popular citation styles for undergraduate students. When you are citing sources, it is important that you follow the rules closely; this includes things like using hanging indentation, italicizing certain parts of the citation , and putting periods and commas in the right place. There are many different sources that provide examples of CITATIONS , some of which will be mentioned here. However, the definitive source for citing in MLA is the official MLA handbook for writers of research papers, 7th Edition.
Defining Visual Rhetorics. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2004. Chapter from an Edited Print Book Harris, Muriel. “Talk to Me: Engaging Reluctant Writers.” A Tutor’s Guide: Helping Writers One to One, edited by Ben Rafoth, Heinemann, 2000, pp. 24-34.
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Documentary Film and Visual Rhetoric, Visual, Defining Visual Rhetorics, This-is-not-rethinking, KATHLEEN E. KENDALL, WRITING CENTER, To Write a Works Cited Page, Works Cited Format for Readings in 098 Course Reader, Visual Rhetoric, Defining, Rhetorics, Visual Culture, Book Review: Advertising Empire: Race and Visual