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LALS 106: Dynamic Women

Why cite your sources?

Why cite?

  • Give credit to the ideas, words and works of others
  • Give your readers the information necessary to find your sources
  • Avoid plagiarism

The purpose of citing your sources is to provide your reader with the information they need in order to find and read the sources themselves. Regardless of the citation style or type of resource, the elements in a citation always include author name, title of the work, and date of publication. Book citations include publisher name and location. Journal, magazine, and newspaper articles include the journal, magazine, or newspaper title, volume and page number, and date; and online sources often include the URL where the document is located and the date the item was retrieved and/or a DOI (digital object indentifier).

Avoiding Plagarism

A copy of the Vassar College Originality and Attribution publication can be downloaded from Dean of the College's website. 

Elements of an annotated bibliography

See Perdue University's Online Writing Lab website for tips on compiling an annotated bibliography. 

Turabian Style Manual (A Manual for Writers)

Print versions (note that copies are shelved in reference, main and art)

7th edition

8th edition

Online version