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Prof. Vecchio - 20th Century U.S. History - SPRING 2022: In-Text Citations

The Path of a Citation

 

The purpose of the in-text citation is to direct the reader to the full citation in the Works Cited page. 

Creating a path from:

                                    The original source to

                                Your text using in-text citations to

                                Your Works Cited page

 

Example of full citation:

Stuart, Reginald. "Trustees Tell Kent State President to Seek Injunction Against Protest." New York Times, 11 Jul. 1977, p. 14. Historical New York Times, lib-proxy.sunywcc.edu/login?url=https://lib-proxy.sunywcc.edu:2077/docview/123464611?accountid=14174.

 

In-text citation:

(Stuart 14)

Quoting vs. Paraphrasing

Direct Quote (original text):

“The content of The Impending Crisis is well known: it argued for slavery's harmful economic, political, and social impact upon non-slaveholding whites, a group largely overlooked by other writers of the time” (Brown 543).

Paraphrasing (putting the text into your own words):

The book The Impending Crisis, unlike many books written at that time, discusses how Southern whites who did not own slaves suffered economically, socially and politically (Brown 543).

Using a Signal Word (asserts):

Brown asserts that The Impending Crisis “argued for slavery's harmful economic, political, and social impact upon non-slaveholding whites, a group largely overlooked by other writers of the time” (543).

Signal Words

Signal words or phrases signal to readers that an outside source is being used. Common signal words show emphasis, addition, comparison or contrast, illustration, and cause and effect.

Some examples:

        According to literary critic Harold Bloom...

        A survey conducted by the Pew Research Center in 2019 indicates that...

        Legal scholar Terrence Roberts offered a persuasive argument: “….”

Below is a list of verbs that can be used in signal phrases:

acknowledges  

contends

insists

adds   

declares    

notes

admits  

denies  

observes

agrees      

describes    

points out

argues   

disputes  

refutes

asserts 

emphasizes 

rejects

believes

endorses   

reports

claims 

grants    

responds

compares 

illustrates 

suggests

confirms

implies

writes

Adapted from A Pocket Style Manual by Diana Hacker.

Hacker, Diana, and Nancy Sommers. A Pocket Style Manual. 7th ed., Bedford St. Martin's, 2014.

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