Citations:
Citations Include as much information as you can about the source. Always include a page number, if it’s there. (Internet sources usually do not have page numbers.) The first time you use a source - introduce it! Always give credit to the person who came up with it, always. Example: Michael Slater, professor of Victorian Literature, discusses Dickens’ literary achievements in his YaleBooks article “Charles Dickens – An Attempt on His Life.”
Without an Author?:
Without an Author? BBC NEWS Magazine’s “When Charles Dickens fell out with America,” published online , highlights the discrepancies Americans had with the British writer.
How About Some More Examples?:
How About Some More Examples? TIME Magazine’s Radhika Jones says that Dickens was the world’s “first literary celebrity” (52). Charles Dickens was the first celebrity (Jones 52). Nicholas Dames, a Victorian scholar and English chairperson of Columbia University, says “He [Dickens] invented merchandising” (Jones 54).
Now It’s Your Turn:
Now It’s Your Turn TIME Magazine, January 30 2012 “Bat Signal ” by Alice Park Page 14 There's an animal apocalypse afoot in the Northeastern U.S. Between 5.7 million and 6.7 million bats are estimated to have died since 2006 from white-nose fungus--an infection marked by the telltale white fuzz around their noses--in 16 U.S. states and Canada, according to officials at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The new estimate finds that the death toll is far worse than wildlife biologists had believed, perhaps five to six times as high as a previous count in 2009, and it could spell disaster--not just for the animals but for humans as well.