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Thea 1 -- History of Theater

Cite Sources

First, citing your sources helps you avoid plagiarism. It also provides a roadmap for readers to see the sources your arguments are built upon. If you rely on good sources, these citations actually help build the strongest case for your ideas. In the scholarly tradition, citing your sources is a way of continuing a conversation with those who have published before you, agreeing, adding to, or disagreeing with others who have read and thought about your topic. 

While there are a few main citation styles (e.g., APA, MLA, Turabian), for this course you'll use the MLA style based on the 8th edition of the MLA style guide. 

Always verify with your instructor which citation style you are to follow.

Always give credit for any information, ideas, or actual wording you get from another source.

Do this by naming the author and page number in parentheses at the end of the sentence in which you use the author’s idea. This is called in-text (or parenthetical) citation.

  • When citing a source in the body of your paper, include the author and page number at the end of the sentence in which you use that source.
  • The period that ends the sentence goes AFTER the parentheses.


The APA and MLA formats for in-text citation are NOT the same. See the individual style guides for examples.

MLA Handbook 8th edition by The Modern Language Association of America

Call Number: LB2369 .G53 2016
ISBN: 9781603292627
Publication Date: 2016-04-01