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Views on Mental Illness: 1950s v. Today: Citing Parts of a Book

This guide will guide your research of disorders you have been assigned. It will also support you in the creation of a lesson plan you will use to teach your peers about the disorder and how its relevance might have changed.

Need more?

Additional examples and explanations for citations of parts of books, including forewords, prefaces, and entries in a reference book, are found in the MLA Handbook (2016), or visit the websites listed on the MLA home page.

In-text citations

Inside your paper, give credit to the works you quote.

See examples of how to tell your readers where facts, paraphrases, or quotes in your paper come from at this site from the Purdue OWL: MLA 2016 In-text Citations.

Basic Chapter or Essay in a Collection

Basic Works Cited Entry

 

Author. "Title of Chapter or Essay." Title of Book or Anthology.
Name of editor of book cited. Publisher, year.
Page numbers of cited essay.

Chapter in an edited book

 

 
 
Dueck, Jeffrey. "Religious Pluralism and the Super Best Friends." South
 
          Park  and Philosophy: You Know, I Learned Something Today. Ed.
 
          Robert  Arp. Blackwell, 2007. pp. 224-235.

 

   

Another part of a book

 

Macdonald, Nancy. Introduction. Graffiti Women: Street Art from Five

     Continents. Abrams, 2006. pp. 12-13.