Skip to Main Content

English 102 - Angelica Davila - Fall 2025

What is a Citation?

A citation is reliable way to lead your reader back to the materials you used in your research.

A citation gives credit to an author for their research, writings and ideas.

Most citations include information such as

  • author's name,
  • title of the book, article or website, 
  • name of the magazine or journal, 
  • date published or updated
  • if the information was found in print or online

When you use citations you are

  • giving credit to the authors of material you used,
  • avoiding plagiarism,
  • showing that you know how to use information well,
  • creating credibility for your paper by providing good quality sources and good quality citations for them.

A URL or web address is not enough information for a citation in any paper or project.

What do MLA Citations Look Like?

Two essential ways to use citations in your paper are shown below.

Below are two types of MLA citations for an essay about protest songs on the Rolling Stone website.

  1. in the text
    AND
  2. on the Works Cited page.

An in-text citation in your paper with a quote or a paraphrase

"When Chuck D of Public Enemy famously called hip-hop “the Black CNN,” he was touching on a universal truth that goes beyond genre: Music and protest have always been inextricably linked." (Browne)

A complete citation for the same article will be included on the Works Cited page at the end of your paper.

Browne, David, et al. “100 Best Protest Songs of All Time.” Rolling Stone Penske Media, 27 Jan. 2025, https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-lists/best-protest-songs-1235154848/sam-cooke-a-change-is-gonna-come-4-1235230160/


Here's a link to the article if you want to see the original source.

https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-lists/best-protest-songs-1235154848/sam-cooke-a-change-is-gonna-come-4-1235230160/

Your List of Sources and Citations - the MLA Works Cited Page

When you are finishing your research paper, it's important to gather up all of your sources and make a list of complete citations for each source.

The list of citations has a specific title in MLA style.

  • Works Cited

Citation lists use the following rules:

  • Start your list of citations on a new page
  • Center the title - Works Cited - at the top of your citation list
  • Arrange the citations in alphabetical order by the last name of the author
    or, if there is no author, by the first major word in the title.
  • Double space the information in the list
  • Use a hanging indent for each entry
  • Do not number items in the list of citations

MLA and Citing AI

You should

  • cite a generative AI tool whenever you paraphrase, quote, or incorporate into your own work any content (whether text, image, data, or other) that was created by an AI app or program.
  • acknowledge all functional uses of the tool (like editing your prose or translating words) in a note, your text, or another suitable location 
  • take care to check the quality of the secondary sources A.I. cites

An example of an MLA citation for using AI to paraphrase information for an essay.

Works-Cited-List Entry

“Describe the symbolism of the green light in the book The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald” prompt. ChatGPT, 13 Feb. version, OpenAI, 8 Mar. 2023, chat.openai.com/chat.

”How do I cite generative AI in MLA style?” MLA Style Center, Modern Language Association. 17 Mar. 2023, https://style.mla.org/citing-generative-ai/

Click the link below for more details and examples of in-text and Works Cited citations.