Tag: works cited

  • MLA Format Essentials and the Works Cited List

    MLA format is the referencing style of the Modern Language Association, set out in the MLA Handbook (9th edition, 2021). It pairs an author–page in-text citation with an alphabetical “Works Cited” list, and builds every entry from one flexible template of core elements rather than from a separate rule for each source type. MLA is the standard in literature, languages, cultural studies and much of the humanities.

    The defining idea of modern MLA is that you describe a source by walking through the same ordered slots every time. This makes MLA unusually adaptable to new media. To see where MLA sits among the major systems, read it alongside our comparison of APA, MLA, Chicago and Vancouver.

    In-text citation: author and page

    MLA in-text citations give the author’s surname and a page number, with no comma between them: (Smith 14). If the author is named in the sentence, only the page appears in brackets: Smith argues that the archive is incomplete (14). The absence of a date in the in-text citation is a deliberate humanities convention — a fourteenth-century poem and a modern reading of it are weighed by argument, not recency.

    The container model

    The heart of MLA 9 is the container. A container is the larger work that holds the source you are citing: a journal that holds an article, a book that holds a chapter, a website that holds a page, a streaming platform that holds a film. You describe the source, then describe its container. A source can sit inside two containers — an article inside a journal, inside a database — and you describe both in turn. This nesting is what lets one template handle a poem in an anthology, an episode on a streaming service, or a tweet, without inventing new rules.

    The nine core elements

    Every Works Cited entry is assembled from up to nine core elements, in this fixed order, each followed by its own punctuation mark:

    Order Core element Ends with
    1 Author. full stop
    2 Title of source. full stop
    3 Title of container, comma
    4 Contributor, comma
    5 Version, comma
    6 Number, comma
    7 Publisher, comma
    8 Publication date, comma
    9 Location. full stop

    You include only the elements that apply to your source and skip the rest, keeping the order intact. A journal article therefore reads: Smith, Jane. “Reading the Incomplete Archive.” Journal of Literary Studies, vol. 14, no. 3, 2021, pp. 220–38. The author and source title come first, then the container with its number, date and “location” — here, the page range.

    Works Cited anatomy

    The Works Cited list is alphabetical by author surname, double-spaced, with a hanging indent — formatting it shares with APA, even though the entry contents differ. “Location” is MLA’s catch-all for where the source sits: page numbers for print, a DOI or URL for online sources, even a physical place for a performance or artwork. MLA 9 recommends including a DOI where one exists, formatted as a full doi.org link, because a stable identifier ties the entry to the durable scholarly record.

    How MLA differs from APA

    The two styles answer different disciplinary needs. APA’s author–date system foregrounds when a study was published, because empirical evidence ages; MLA’s author–page system foregrounds where in the text a passage sits, because close reading depends on pointing to exact lines. APA title-cases journal names but sentence-cases article titles; MLA uses title case throughout and puts article and chapter titles in quotation marks. The choice between them is set by your discipline and your editor, as our APA essentials guide explains for the social sciences.

    Whatever the style, the underlying questions about who is credited and how contributions are recorded are constant — which is why CASRAI’s work on authorship and credit sits beneath every referencing system, not above any one of them.

    Frequently asked questions

    What if a source has no page numbers?

    Omit the page number from the in-text citation and use the author’s name alone: (Smith). If the source has numbered paragraphs or sections, you may cite those with a label, such as (Smith, par. 4). Do not count unnumbered pages yourself.

    How do I cite a source inside a database?

    Use two containers. Describe the article and its journal (the first container), then add the database as a second container with the DOI or stable URL as the location. This is exactly the nesting the container model was designed for.

    Does MLA use “et al.” for multiple authors?

    Yes. For three or more authors, name the first author followed by “et al.” in both the in-text citation and the Works Cited entry. Two authors are both named, joined by “and”.

    Should I include URLs in MLA?

    MLA 9 recommends including a DOI where available, and otherwise a stable URL, as the location element. You may drop the “https://” prefix per the handbook’s guidance. Check our author guidance if you are unsure how to describe an unusual online output.

  • What Is a Bibliography? Definition, Types and How to Compile

    A bibliography is an organised, alphabetised list of sources relevant to a piece of scholarly work, placed at the end of a document. Depending on the convention in use, a bibliography may list only the sources cited or may also include background works consulted but not directly cited. Its purpose is to record the intellectual context of a work and let readers locate every source behind it.

    The word carries more than one meaning in scholarship. In some citation systems “bibliography” is the standard name for the end-of-document source list; in others it is distinguished sharply from a reference list. Understanding which sense applies is the first step to compiling one correctly.

    Bibliography versus reference list

    The clearest way to grasp a bibliography is to set it against the reference list it is often confused with.

    Feature Reference list Bibliography
    Contents Only sources cited in the text May include cited and uncited background reading
    Mapping to text One-to-one with in-text citations Need not map to every in-text marker
    Typical styles APA, Vancouver (as “References”) Chicago notes-bibliography, MLA (“Works Cited”)

    A reference list answers the question “what did you cite?” A bibliography can answer the broader question “what shaped this work?” The mapping between in-text markers and entries is covered in in-text citations versus the reference list.

    Types of bibliography

    Enumerative bibliography

    The most common form: a straightforward list of sources, alphabetised by author surname, each entry formatted to a chosen style. This is what most students and researchers mean by “a bibliography”.

    Annotated bibliography

    Each entry is followed by a short paragraph — the annotation — that summarises the source, evaluates its relevance or quality, and notes how it relates to the project. Annotated bibliographies are common in literature reviews and proposals, where the reader benefits from the author’s assessment of each source.

    Analytical and descriptive bibliography

    A specialist scholarly field concerned with books as physical objects — their printing, editions and material history. This sense is distinct from the everyday end-of-paper list and belongs to textual scholarship rather than routine citation.

    How to compile a bibliography

    Compiling a reliable bibliography is a disciplined, repeatable process.

    • Record sources as you read. Capture full bibliographic detail — author, year, title, container, publisher and a persistent identifier such as a DOI — at the moment you consult each source, not afterwards from memory.
    • Choose one citation style and apply it consistently. The required elements are stable, but their order and punctuation are not. See citation styles compared to select the right one.
    • Decide cited-only or cited-plus-background. Confirm whether your style and assignment want a reference list or a fuller bibliography, then include sources accordingly.
    • Alphabetise and format. Order entries by the first author’s surname and apply a hanging indent so each entry is easy to scan.
    • Verify every entry. Check that each persistent identifier resolves and that names are disambiguated — an ORCID iD helps distinguish authors with similar names.

    How to order and format entries

    Most enumerative bibliographies are ordered alphabetically by the lead author’s surname. Where an author has several works, they are usually ordered by year. Numeric systems such as Vancouver are an exception: there the list is ordered by the sequence of first appearance in the text, not alphabetically. Each entry typically uses a hanging indent, and titles, journals and books are styled per the chosen system.

    System Ordering principle
    Author–date (APA, Chicago author–date) Alphabetical by surname, then by year
    MLA Works Cited Alphabetical by first listed name or title
    Numeric (Vancouver) By order of citation in the text

    Relationship to works cited and references

    “Works Cited” is MLA’s name for its end-of-paper list and contains only cited sources, making it functionally a reference list rather than a full bibliography. Knowing the vocabulary your discipline uses prevents the common error of mixing background reading into a list that should be cited-only. Sound bibliographies also support research integrity, because a complete, accurate source list lets others verify and build on your work.

    Frequently asked questions

    Is a bibliography the same as a reference list?

    Not always. A reference list contains only the sources you cited. A bibliography may also include background works you read but did not cite. Some styles, however, use “bibliography” as the name for what others call a reference list, so always check your style’s convention.

    What is an annotated bibliography?

    An annotated bibliography adds a short evaluative paragraph after each entry, summarising the source and explaining its relevance. It is common in literature reviews and research proposals where readers benefit from the author’s assessment of each work.

    How do I order a bibliography?

    Most bibliographies are alphabetised by the lead author’s surname, then by year for multiple works by the same author. Numeric systems such as Vancouver are the exception and order entries by their first appearance in the text.

    Where can I find standardised definitions of these terms?

    Consult the CASRAI dictionary for standardised definitions, and our explainer on what a citation is for how individual references fit together.