The Robert College Guide to Bibliographic Citation

The Robert College Guide to Quotation and Citation
Modern Language Association (MLA) format.
When you are asked to write your work in MLA style, each source cited in the text must appear in the
reference list or bibliography, and each source in the reference list must be cited in the text.
You need to cite your source when you quote the exact words which someone else has said or written. If
you do not cite your source, you may be accused of plagiarism. Plagiarism is a serious form of cheating: it
is passing somebody else's work off as your own. Plagiarism may be a criminal offence, and you may never
be believed again if you are discovered doing this. If you copy someone else's work without their
permission and the piece is published, then you are committing a breach of copyright and this is a criminal
offence.
When you use the exact words used by a source, you show that these are someone else’s exact words
by enclosing them in “quotation marks” OR, if the quotation is longer than 4 typed lines, start the
quotation on a new line, indent the full quotation but do not use quotation marks.
If your quotation is not complete and you leave out some of the original words, use . . . an ellipsis. If you
use your own wording inside a quotation, perhaps to make better sense of a connective, put your word/s in
(parentheses).
It is also necessary to cite your source when you are paraphrasing or summarising someone else's work or
ideas; it is definitely a mistake to pass their ideas off as your own. In fact, you can strengthen an argument
by pointing to a well-known person or a published author who thinks as you do! As you are not quoting
the exact words used, you should NOT use quotation marks.
You signal that this piece (thought, sentence, paragraph, table, illustration whatever) is not your
own by introducing the material with a signal phrase which includes the author’s name, or by
finishing that material with a parenthetical citation. There are examples of these in action in the next
few pages. Make it clear where the borrowed material starts and finishes. Quotation marks do this. New
paragraphs can do this. An opening signal and a closing page number will also do this.
Remember, anything NOT signalled as borrowed from somebody else is taken to be your own work.
You do not have to cite your source when the ideas used are common knowledge, for example:
The United States of America is one of the richest countries in the world today.
But if you are not sure whether this is common knowledge, play safe and cite your source.
=======================================================
MLA style uses an author-page method of citation. The author's last name and the page number from
which the quotation or paraphrase is used must appear in the text, and a complete reference should be
included in your reference list. Include just enough information to distinguish between different works by
the same author and/ or between authors with the same name. If it is not possible to give a page number, as
when you are citing an electronic document or when the idea is general throughout the original work, then
it is acceptable to give only the author.
When you use a table, illustration, diagram or similar, put a title at the top and give the full details of the
source at the foot; label your tables as Table 1, Table 2, etc. and all other illustrations as Fig. 1, Fig. 2, etc..
Note that when you cite the source, there are some differences to the style used in the Reference List.
Examples
There are several ways of citing your source and noting the page. The examples below show some of
these different ways. Note when quotation marks are used and when they are not used; note the use
of parentheses and ellipses.
The full references are given amongst the examples in the Bibliographic Citation guide above.
Blitzer suggests that at the start of the 17th century, the kingdom of Bohemia was the most valuable part of
the Holy Roman Empire (31).
The signal is Blitzer suggests…; the end of the borrowed material is signalled by the (page number).
It could be that there is no one easy quick-fix for dealing with stress (Barber 236).
The signal is in the closing parentheses, (Barber, page 236).
It need not be negative. "Keep people stretched, give them as much responsibility as they can handle,
allow them discretion and the space to make decisions, and they will feel no need to use their negative
power; they will have plenty of the positive kind" (Handy, Inside... 120).
As in the previous example, the signal is in the closing parentheses. Handy is used at least twice, from two
different source; this particular quotation is taken from Inside Organizations: 21 Ideas for Managers,
page 120.
Handy points out the danger: "Close teams can become closed teams" (Inside... 130).
The signal is Handy points out … . Handy is now seen as an expert – when the person cited is signalled at
the start of the material borrowed, there is greater weight on that person, there is more authority. The
closing parenthetical citation Inside Organizations: 21 Ideas for Managers, page 130 allows the reader
to find the quotation within the book.
But there are drawbacks. “The problem is there is no reasonable device to read these digital textbooks on,
as it can be hard to read and follow textbooks on a laptop. This is why many believe the Kindle will be a
hit on college campuses, assuming many take a following to digital textbooks” (“Where to Download…”)
The quotation comes from the article “Where to Download Textbooks”. There is no author. The quotation
marks show that these were the exact words used.
World Book Online might not offer technical support in some parts of Asia, but as Kitterer points out,
technical support is probably not needed for many web applications.
Kitterer might have mentioned World Book Online, but she is named as making the point about technical
support not always being needed (in remote areas). IF Kitterer had mentioned World Book Online as a
specific example, the sentence would probably have read “Kitterer points out that World Book Online…”
One of the myths which Wolff investigates is the notion that if an image is found in a Google search then it
is in the public domain and can be freely used. She makes clear that this is not so (slide 2).
The signal is “Wolff investigates… ” and it is slide 2 of the downloaded file.
In the Wellesley College study, the majority of students said they know that information found on the
Internet may be unreliable, yet few students made any effort to verify the information they found (Graham
and Metaxas).
The signal is in the closing parentheses: Graham and Metaxas make a point based upon (one of) the results
of the Wellesley College study.
In the Decca recording of Rachmaninoff’s 1st and 3rd Piano Concertos, Ashkenazy seems to have at least
four hands.
The writer is talking about the pianist, Ashkenazy, rather than about the composer, so Ashkenazy will be the
lead-in in the full reference in the Reference List.
Bernstein may be best known for West Side Story and On the Town, but his comic genius really shines in
Wonderful Town. In this musical, we can see influences from opera, from comic opera, from stage and
film musical, and something which seems to be wholly Bernstein…
Bernstein is seen as the important personage, so will be the lead-in in the full reference in the Reference List.
As it is the musical in general rather than a particular performance, there is no mention of the performers,
the orchestra, etc.
OR
Rattle leads enthusiastically; he brings out the best in the orchestra, the singers, and the audience too. The
show ends with singers, audience and even some of the orchestra dancing the conga through the
auditorium. Wonderful Town, wonderful experience!
It’s the same musical, but this time Rattle is the subject of the essay – or at least this part of it - so will be the
lead-in in the full reference in the Reference List.
OR
Ruth, as played by Kim Criswell, is blousily reflective in “100 Ways To Lose A Man,” but it is the
“Conga” which is the showstopper. Here, reporter Ruth is assigned to find out what the visiting Brazilian
sailors think about issues in American politics; all they want to do is learn the conga! The contemporary
references are cleverly made, and even if the modern audience has no idea of the contemporary context it
matters not. This is one of Criswell’s finest performances.
Again the same musical, but this time Criswell is thesubject of the essay – or at least this part of it - so will be
the lead-in in the full reference in the Reference List.
If the full essay – or at least this part of it - is about this particular performance of Wonderful Town, there
would probably be just one reference to it, probably headed by Bernstein, the composer.
Literacy means that people can read; it does not necessarily mean that they do read:
We have a nonreading syndrome (in Turkey). A nation of more than 60 million
with a literacy rate of 80% could be expected to read more. Total newspaper
circulation has remained virtually unchanged in 25 years. Book sales have
barely increased. The annual number of titles published has gone down . . . The
government has opened more than a thousand local public libraries. Yet reading
is lagging (Halman 898).
Table 2: Relative size of planets and distance from the Sun.
Equatorial radius
(Earth=1)
Mean distance from
sun (AU)
Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune Pluto
0.382
0.949 1.000 0.532 11.209 9.449
4.007
3.883
0.180
0.387
0.723
1.000
1.533
5.203
9.539
19.191
30.061
39.529
Source: J. Kelly Beatty and Andrew Chaikin; The New Solar System, 3rd ed Cambridge, MA: Sky
Publishing, 1990; 289.
Fig. 2. Richard Dadd; “The Fairy Feller's Master-Stroke” (1855-64);
Oil on canvas, size 21.25 x 15.5 inches Tate Gallery, London; Web; 20 Apr. 2008.
The Robert College Guide to Bibliographic Citation
following Modern Language Association (MLA) format (edition 7).
The MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers 7 th edition has several hundred rules which attempt to cover every
possible situation. This sheet lists only the most common situations, but you may be able to work out how to cite in situations not
covered here. Most important is that you attempt to cite your work, and that you attempt to be consistent. Not citing your sources
could lead to accusations of plagiarism. If you need help, ask a teacher or a librarian.
The bibliography in a paper formatted in MLA style is more properly a REFERENCE LIST of titles referred to in the paper.
Each source cited in the essay must appear in the reference list, and each source in the reference list must be cited in the text.
Books: authors, editors, translators
If your bibliography includes more than one book by the same author, list them in alphabetical order of title (ignoring initial 'A'or
'The'); use three hyphens and a period the second time. List multiple authors in the order used on the title page; only the first
named is inverted. If there are four or more authors, list only the first followed by et al (and others). If the book has been edited,
translated or compiled, use the abbreviations ed., tr., or comp. as appropriate.
If the work is published by or on behalf of a corporate entity and with no named author, you can use the name of the
organization or agency instead. If no author is listed, use the title (or the first few words) instead.
Barber, E. J. W. Women’s Work: The First 20,000 Years. New York: Norton, 1994. Print.
Barber, Roger. Managing People. London: Kogan Page, 1989. Print.
Beatty, J. Kelly and Andrew Chaikin. The New Solar System. 3rd ed. Cambridge MA: Sky, 1990. Print.
Dawkins, Richard. The Selfish Gene. 30th Anniversary ed. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2006. Google Book Search.
Web. 3 Sept. 2009.
Dunn, Rita and Kenneth Dunn. Teaching Students Through Their Individual Learning Styles: A Practical
Approach. Boston: Allyn & Bacon, 1978. Print.
Handy, Charles B. The Age of Paradox. Boston: Harvard Business School, 1994. Google Book Search.
Web. 3 Sept. 2009.
---. Inside Organizations: 21 Ideas for Managers. London: BBC, 1990. Print.
Kuntzsch, Ingrid. A History of Jewels and Jewellery. Tr. Sheila Marnie. New York: St. Martin's P, 1981.
Print.
Lipsey, Richard G. et al. Microeconomics.10th ed. New York: Harper Collins, 1993. Print.
“To Your Health (book reviews).” 20 Dec. 2005. Pacific Northwest Convergence. Web. 21 Dec. 2005.
Wallen, Norman E., and Jack R. Fraenkel. Educational Research: A Guide to the Process 2nd ed. San
Francisco: San Francisco State U, 2001. Print.
Wallen, Norman E., and Jack R. Fraenkel. Educational Research: A Guide to the Process 2nd ed. San
Francisco: San Francisco State U, 2001. Questia. Web. 9 Sept. 2009.
World Health Organization. “What is the Deadliest Disease in the World?” Ask an expert : online Q&A.
22 June 2005. Web. 21 Dec. 2005.
Books: volume in a series, source within a source (when using several pieces from a single
collection, you may use a short reference for each individual piece, and cross reference to the full collection.)
Blitzer, Charles. Age of Kings. Amsterdam: Time-Life International, 1969. Print. Great Ages of Man.
Herriot, Peter. "The Selection Interview." Psychology at Work, 3rd ed. Ed. Peter Warr. London: Penguin,
1987. 139-177. Print.
Leeson, Robert. “Ten Golden Rules.” Powling 215-216.
Meek Margaret. “The Limits of Delight.” Powling 27-31.
Powling, Chris, ed. The Best of Books for Keeps: Highlights From the Leading Childrens’ Book Magazine.
London: Bodley Head, 1994. Print.
Tucker, Nicholas. “My Affair With Judy.” Powling 177-181.
Encyclopedia articles, signed and unsigned (Many teachers do not normally allow the use of Wikipedia
– or any other encyclopedia – as a source. However, there may be times, as when discussing Wikipedia, when it has
to be used and cited! Note: Because Wikipedia’s pages may be updated frequently, you are required to state not just
the date, but also the time of access.)
"Abraham Lincoln." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. 8 Aug. 2009, 21:32 UTC. Web. 8 Nov. 2009.
Boritt, Gabor S. "Lincoln, Abraham" The World Book Encyclopedia 1999 ed. Print.
"Lincoln, Abraham." Compton's Encyclopedia and Fact Index.1988 ed. Print.
Newspapers, magazines and journals, newsletters: articles with and without named
author/s
Barber, Michael. "Born To Be Better." Times Educational Supplement 18 Mar. 1994: 19. Print.
Halman, Talat S. "From Babylon to Liberspace". American Libraries 26 (1995): 895-898. Print.
“Health : the facts.” New Internationalist 272. 1995. Web. 20 Dec. 2005.
"Minister Announces Cuba Y2K-ready." Radio Rebelde, Havana report, originally in Spanish, as provided
by BBC Worldwide Monitoring, 15 December 1999. Global NewsBank. Web. 23 Dec. 1999.
Nielsen, Jakob. "Voodoo Usability." Alertbox 12 December 1999. Web. 13 Dec. 1999.
Scandura, Jani. “Deadly Professions: Dracula, Undertakers, and the Embalmed Corpse.” Victorian Studies
40 (1996) n. pag. Questia. Web. 8 Sept. 2009.
"Teltech Tales." Economist 26 June 1993: 98-99. Print.
Walters, Joanna. “All American Trouble.” GuardianOnline. Guardian14 Mar. 2006. Web. 16 Aug. 2009.
Interviews: personal, published, broadcast.
Aybars, Ersin. Personal interview. 7 Jan. 1999. (Translated by the writer.)
Kelly, Maura. "Not Part Of A Pair: Kelly Number Two." With Zerrin Aktuna. Bosphorus Chronicle
Jan. 2000: 6. Print.
Wallace, Mike. Interview. Larry King Live. CNN, Atlanta. 23 Dec. 1999. Television.
Movies and Performances, Recordings etc: on-stage, film, DVD, CD, etc. (Include as much
detail as seems necessary; this may depend on the aspect of the work that you want to emphasise. Include enough
detail for the particular performance to be uniquely identified.)
Ashkenazy, Vladimir. Klavierkonzerte Nr. 1 and 3. By Sergei Rachmaninoff. London Symphony Orch.
Cond. André Previn. Decca, 1972. LP.
Bernstein, Leonard. Wonderful Town. Lyrics by Betty Comden and Adolph Green. Perf. Kim Criswell,
Audra McDonald, Thomas Hampson, Brent Barrett. Berlin Philarmoniker. Cond. Simon Rattle.
EuroArts, 2002. DVD.
Comden, Betty and Adolph Green. Wonderful Town. Composed by Leonard Bernstein.EuroArts, 2002.
DVD.
Criswell, Kim. “Conga.” Wonderful Town. By Leonard Bernstein. Lyrics by Betty Comden and Adolph
Green. Berlin Philarmoniker. Cond. Simon Rattle. EuroArts, 2002. DVD.
Rachmaninoff, Sergei. Klavierkonzerte Nr. 1 and 3. Perf. Vladimir Ashkenazy. London Symphony Orch.
Cond. André Previn. Decca, 1972. LP.
Rattle, Simon, cond. Wonderful Town. By Leonard Bernstein. Lyrics by Betty Comden and Adolph Green.
Berlin Philarmoniker. Perf. Kim Criswell, Audra McDonald, Thomas Hampson, Brent Barrett.
EuroArts, 2002. DVD.
Shostakovich, Dimitri. "Jazz Suite No. 2." The Jazz Album. Ronald Brautigan, piano, Peter Masseurs,
trumpet. Cond. Riccardo Chailly. Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra. Decca, 1993. CD.
Simon, Paul. “Diamonds on the soles of her shoes”. Graceland. Warner Brothers, 1986. CD.
World Wide Web (WWW) (MLA does not require a URL, although the writer should include it if required by the
teacher, or if the page cannot easily be found using a search engine or the website’s own search facility.)
Harnack, Andrew and Gene Kleppinger. "Beyond the MLA Handbook: Documenting Electronic Sources
on the Internet." 25 Nov 1996. Web. 1 Mar. 2000.
“Where to Download Textbooks.” Campus Grotto n.d. Web. 25 Oct. 2008.
File downloaded from the Internet
Blakeman, Karen. “Top Tips for Expert Searching.” 2005. Microsoft PowerPoint file.
Graham, Leah & Panagiotis Takis Metaxas. “’Of course it's true; I saw it on the Internet!’ Critical thinking
in the Internet era.” Communications of the ACM May 2003: 71-75. PDF file. Web. 31 Dec. 2008.
Wolff, Nancy E. “Copyright/Copywrong in Image Licensing.” The Jane Kinne Copyright Education
Program. 8 Jan. 2008. Digital file.
Facsimile manuscript, on the web.
Blake, William. The Notebook of William Blake. Folio N105. British Lib. London, n.d. Virtual Library :
Turning the Pages.. Web. 27 Oct. 2008.
Web forum / Moodle / Listserv
Fraser, Kerry. "Mini Laptops." ECIS ICT forum. Online posting. N. pag. 7 Dec. 1999. Web. 23 Dec. 1999.
Kitterer, Carolyn. “Re: recommendations please - databases and periodicals.” iSkoodle (European Council
of International Skoodle). N. pag., n.d. Web. 27 Oct. 2008.
Blog / Weblog
Best Logos. "Queen - Rock Band Logo." Best Logos - World's Best Logos & Brands. N. pag.., 15 Jan.
2008. Web. 3 Sept. 2008.
email
Clark, Coralie. "Conference 2000". 5 Oct. 1999. E-mail.
Podcast
Toksvig, Sandi, host. The News Quiz.. BBC Radio 4. 24 Oct. 2008. BBC.. Web. 27 Oct. 2008.
Image (note: images, graphs, and other illustrative material: reference the source of an illustration underneath
the illustration, not in the list of references at the end of the paper. See examples below.)
Dadd, Richard. The Fairy Feller's Master-Stroke. 1855-64. Tate Gallery, London. Shakespeare Illustrated.
Web. 9 Sept. 2008.
Da Vinci, Leonardo. Mona Lisa. 1503 / 1506. Oil on poplar wood. Louvre, Paris. Web. 8 Sept. 2008.
Citation FAQ (MLA style)
When I use an article I found in a database, do I need to copy those desperately long URLs?
Fortunately, no! When you use an an online database, give the full details of the original article,
then add the name of the database (Infotrac, in this case), the date of access, and the URL of the
home page of the database.
Judd, Judith. “Girls dominate private schools' A-level tables as Eton slips again.” The
Independent (London), August 26, 2000: 10. Global NewsBank with Periodicals. 25
November 2003. <http://infoweb.newsbank.com/>
Williams, Caroline. “Long time no sea: over the past 40 years one of the world's largest lakes has
been vanishing before our eyes. Can the Aral Sea be saved.” New Scientist, January 4, 2003, 177
(2376): 34-37. General Reference Centre Gold. Infotrac. 11 October 2003.
<http://infoweb.newsbank.com/>
The long URL is meaningless, thrown up by the database server for your particular query. Another
user, performing the same search later, or using a different computer, would probably get a different
URL.
How do I cite a quotation of a quotation?
The best advice is to go to the original source whenever you can. This is because mis-quotation
happens all too often. Author B makes a mistake in his quotation of author A (perhaps leaves out
the word NOT in his quotation), and author C quotes author B, so “confirming” the error - and the
mistake goes on and on and gets life of its own.
Even more important, if you cannot trace the path back to the original source, then you must make
it clear in your parenthetical citation that what you are quoting is NOT the original, but another
author's quotation of the original. Only cite the original source if you can actually track it down and
check it!
Egoff's test for a "good" book, "A fine book sends me rushing to share it, with anyone I can find,
child or adult; a mediocre books sets my teeth on edge, and a poor one makes me laugh," (qtd. in
Spink: 82) suggests that there is no objective measure of quality.
Works cited:
Spink, John. Children as readers: a study. London: Clive Bingley, 1989.
How do I cite a paraphrase of a paraphrase?
Once again, track down the original if you can. If you cannot, then quote the source you actually
use, and not the original source.
How do I cite an article reprinted in a book of readings?
You need to provide full guide to the original article, but also refer to the collection in which you
found it.
Royce, John. "Trust or Trussed? Has Turnitin.com Got It All Wrapped Up?" in Teacher-Librarian
30:4, April 2003, 26-30. Rpt. in Intellectual Property. Spec issue of Reference Shelf 75:3, New
York: H.W.Wilson, 2003, 62-72.
How do I cite a work (poem, essay, play, short or long story) which is reprinted in an
anthology?
The rules are slightly different to that for articles. If the original first appeared as a separate
publication, italicize the title; if it was originally part of another work, then the title of the short
piece, in quotation marks, is enough. If you wish to show the original year of publication of the
original piece, you can, after the title.
Author. "Title." Title of anthology. Ed. Editor first Last. Place: Pub, year. 76-78.
Author. Title of play. Title of anthology. Comp. and ed. Compiler/Editor first Last. Place: Pub,
year. 76-78.
Author. Title,of novella. date. Title of anthology. Ed. Editor first Last. Place: Pub, year. 76-78.
Do I need to get permission to use pictures from the internet?
Normally, yes. You can use short extracts or paraphrase from articles, books, web pages, television
programs, and so on, without seeking permission. It is different as soon as you start using whole
works, or substantial pieces of whole works. Pictures are often considered whole in themselves.
Using a whole work without permission, even if you cite its source, may be considered infringment
of copyright. This is a legal offense, and can cost serious money. As a rule of thumb, if you cannot
find a statement giving free right to copy the piece, you should contact the author, artist, or
publisher to obtain permission to use the piece – especially if you are going to publish your work, in
hard-copy, on the Internet, anywhere. Very often and especially if you are not charging money for
your publication, permission is given without question and without fee. When you write to obtain
permission, make a note of this:
(reproduced by kind permission of the author).
Should I list my Works Used in the order in which they are used in my text?
Normally, no. You should list your works in alphabetical order of author's last name, with a
hanging indent to make fore easy scanning. If there is no author, then the title is used, ignoring
initial definite and indefinite articles ('A' or 'The'). If there are several authors, only the first named
author is named last name first; all other authors are in firstname lastname order.
In your list of works used, include all works which you refer to in the text, and only those works.
Do not include works you might have used in your background reading, but have not referred to in
your text.
Do not include here the page numbers of any quotations you have used; the place for those is in the
text.
If I use different pages from an article spread over several web pages, can I just cite the
“front page” of the article?
If the pages you refer to are contiguous, you may simply declare the first page and allow the reader
to follow the same path you did to gather your information.
If I use several pages from a single site, can I just cite the site home page?
One of the purposes of the Works Cited list is to make it easy for future readers to access your
information sources and deepen their own knowledge, Whereas it may be acceptable to declare the
home page, it is not as helpful as providing clear references to specific pages.
How do I cite a pop-up frame which has no (separate) URL?
I would strongly recommend against using sites that have pop-ups, let alone the pop-up itself. How
can you possibly check the authority of the writer and the accuracy and currency of the information?
How should I use foreign language characters and accents?
If your quotation is from a foreign language, you should reproduce the text, including letters,
accents and marks, just as they are used in the original language. If you do not have the letters,
accents, or marks, you should write them in by hand. However, "foreign" fonts are available in
many word processing programs. Windows has a Character Map which can usually be found in the
Accessories programs, often in the System Tools sub-folder.
Note that foreign is relative to the language of your own work. If you are writing an essay in
English, then Turkish is a foreign language. On the other hand, if your essay is in Turkish, then
your quotation from a piece in English is in a foreign language.
When the original quotation is in a language other than English, should I translate it?
This will depend on your readership. If your readers are likely to understand the quotation, then no
translation is necessary. If there is any doubt, a translation might be kind. If you prefer not to
interrupt the text, you can make your translation in a footnote.
When the original title is in a language other than English, should I translate it?
As with quotations, this might well depend on your readership.
Author. Title [eng translation]. Place [eng version]: Publisher, date.
When the original script is non-roman, should I use the original script or should I
transliterate (use roman characters)? Should I translate it?
As with the above, this might well depend on your readership.
How do I cite a picture downloaded from the internet?
Pictures and other illustrative material should be labelled Figure or Fig., given an arabic numeral
(thus: Fig. 1, Fig. 2 … Fig. 22), and include a label/ title, and a caption which gives full details
about the source of the illustration. If your illustration is your own work, it should still have a
figure number and a label/ title.
Note: Your in-text citation will say (See fig. 3).
Example:
Fig. 3. Russel, Ben. Teacher: portrail of English teacher in his classroom. 2007. Photograph. Flikr.
Web. 4 Oct. 2012.
Do I need to cite a picture photocopied from a copyright-free source?
Yes. Whether it is words, pictures, or any other original material, you do need to cite the source.
My document has disappeared from the internet; how can I cite it?
This is one of many reasons why it is important to keep track of your sources as you go. I’m going
to assume you did that and therefore still have the URL. Go to the Wayback Machine and paste that
URL into its search field. This Internet archive will find your old site for you. You should cite the
webpage as you would normally, and then give the Wayback Machine information. MLA provides
the following example:
McDonald, R. C. "Basic Canary Care." _Robirda Online_. 12 Sept. 2004. 18 Dec. 2006 . _Internet
Archive_. <http://web.archive.org/web/20041009202820/http://www.robirda.com/cancare.html>.
If the date that the information was updated is missing, one can use the closest date in the Wayback
Machine.
That said, you might want to wonder why the site was taken down. Has the author made something
better that you could locate with a fresh search? Was it forced down by legal action? Do some more
research before you use this site’s information.
John Royce and Karen Lindsay