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Parenthetical Citations, Footnotes, and Endnotes. in disgustingly gross detail. Reminder:. We use parenthetical citations to give credit to the people’s thoughts we use. We give credit for: direct quotes paraphrasing summarizing. What’s a Direct Quote?.
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Parenthetical Citations, Footnotes, and Endnotes in disgustingly gross detail.
Reminder: • We use parenthetical citations to give credit to the people’s thoughts we use. • We give credit for: • direct quotes • paraphrasing • summarizing
What’s a Direct Quote? • A direct quote happens when you write down EXACTLY what another person or author wrote, not just when you are conducting an interview.
Example • “Green chile is part of my soul,” (McNamer, interview) said a former New Mexican resident.
What does paraphrasing mean? • Basically, paraphrasing is when you explain what your source said in your own words. You still have to give them credit!
How is a summary different? • Paraphrasing is used for smaller concepts. When you summarize, you take a big idea and explain it in less complex terms.
Example • The St. Louis Rams destroyed the Arizona Cardinals winning streak (“St. Louis Rams hand Arizona Cardinals their first loss”). • Notice how we left out details about the football game but still gave our source CREDIT.
The general parenthetical citation from a book: • We see Scout admit that she lies to her father when she says, “I said I could like it very much, which was a lie, but one must lie under certain circumstances” (Lee 128).
Two things to note: • We see Scout admit that she lies to her father when she says, “I said I could like it very much, which was a lie, but one must lie under certain circumstances” (Lee 128). • The author’s name and page number appear without a “p” or comma • we know the number is a page • we don’t need a comma, either • Punctuation appears outside the quotation • there are certain circumstances that require punctuation inside the quotation…
“Certain circumstances:” • When the quotation has pertinent punctuation in it that change the meaning if omitted • The older waiter in Hemingway's "A Clean, Well-Lighted Place" asks himself, "What did he fear?" (79). • But notice, there is still a closing punctuation mark after the citation
Speaking of Hemingway… • You might have noticed that the citation didn’t have an author in it! • The older waiter in Hemingway's "A Clean, Well-Lighted Place" asks himself, "What did he fear?" (79). • That’s because I already gave the author credit! • Do you see it?
Trickery: • Citing the author this way (in the sentence itself) accomplishes two things: • It cites the author (duh). • It varies your sentence structure automatically for you! • this = good writing
What about those pesky internet sources? • Cite the author, forget the page number • Nopages exist in cyberspace. • No author? Should you really use the site? • If no one takes credit for it, is it a credible site? • If you must, cite the website
Internet Example (Preferable) • If you MUST use one without an author, use the article title: • There is no truth to the rumor that al-Qaeda has poisoned the Coca-Cola supply in our country (“Coca-Cola No Al Queda”).
Internet example (no title?): • There is no truth to the rumor that al-Qaeda has poisoned the Coca-Cola supply in our country (snopes.com). • Also note that the good folks at “snopes.com” DO take credit for their work • Their names are Barbara and David Mickelson and they do a nice job fact-checking… • Note: • I did not give the complete URL, only the main title. • The complete URL goes in your works cited page.
What? Interview sources? • Cite the last name of the interviewee. • Then, say that it was an interview.
Interview example: • As junior students, we were told that this paper is “dummy proof and it’s impossible to do wrong if you try” (Lesh, Interview). • Note the same rules apply: • No comma • Punctuation outside of the parentheses
Remember… • Parenthetical citations are just the beginning. Your complete citations should be listed on your Works Cited page or Bibliography.
Not really into parentheticals? • Don’t sweat it. You have options. • Try using a footnote or endnote. • These guys allow you to include all your parenthetical information at the bottom of the page or the end of your research paper.
Footnotes and Endnotes • Really, these guys just give you more citation options. • Both appear as a superscript.1 • Both appear numerically. See? Here’s a superscript. Look! It’s also outside of the punctuation!
Where do I put them? • These little buggers appear at the END of you page • Endnotes don’t appear until the end of your entire research paper, right before your works cited page.
Properly formatted Footnotes Ta-Da!
Endnotes, just like your Works Cited page, get a whole page to themselves. Woo hoo!
The first citation is key! • This is because the first time you use a footnote or endnote you must do a complete citation! • But, the citation format is different from the Works Cited or Bibliography format.
Pay close attention… Author first name, author last name, Title of Source (Publishing location: Publisher, year published) Page number you used.
After the first citation… • …things get really easy. • After the first citation, all you need to include is the author name and the page you used. Remember, if this information isn’t available, you move on to use the title of publishing company.
Remember when I said it’s almost like, “Where’s Waldo?” • I really wasn’t kidding. Just like traditional MLA book citations, each endnote and footnote citation will be slightly different depending on your source. • So, be careful! And, ask for a second opinion if you think you might need it.
Finally… • If you can out-perform the student on the next slide by creating a song that helps us memorize an aspect of MLA citations either on your own or in a group I will give you 5 points of extra credit.
Works Cited Blackcatcia. "MLA Citation Memorization Song." YouTube. YouTube, 28 Mar. 2011. Web. 07 Oct. 2012. <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfambCy5YDE>. "Game Center." NFL : Arizona Cardinals at St. Louis Rams. Nfl.com, 06 Oct. 2012. Web. 07 Oct. 2012. <http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2012100400/2012/REG5/cardinals@rams>. Lesh, Benjamin. "Parenthetical Citations." Parenthetical Citations. Www.slideshare.net, 07 Oct. 2007. Web. 07 Oct. 2012. http://www.slideshare.net/leshb/parenthetical-citations-127716>. McNamer, Anna M. "Interview." Personal interview. 07 Oct. 2012.