You must cite the source of either a quotation or paraphrased material. Include the author's name and the page number(s) from which the material was taken in parentheses following the statement you make. If you mention the author in the text, you do not have to repeat his or her name in the citation. If you cite more than one work by the same author in your paper, you must include a short title to inform the reader of which work you are citing.
- Citing in text by paraphrasing:
- In A Critical History of American Literature David Lynch provides a useful discussion of the Romantics (538-89), as well as authors from other periods.
- Citing in text by paraphrasing:
- In the 1990s, media coverage of police brutality reached an all time high (Marshall 6).
- Citing in text by quoting:
- The author has described this era to be "the most turbulent in modern history" (Brown 21).
- Citing in text by quoting:
- In "The Threshold of the Mountain in Dante's Divine Comedy," Helen Luke notes that "almost daily this great image of Dante's passage from the blind murk to the shining dark may come to our aid"(55).
- Citing in text by ChatGPT:
- (paraphrased from ChatGPT) or (generated by ChatGPT)