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Literary Criticism Citation Diagrams and Examples 1) Diagram of a critical article which was originally part of a BOOK and republished in a literary criticism source (the source you are using) like CLC, TCLC, NCLC, Modern Critical Views, Bloom's Notes or any other collections of articles/essays.
Book title where article originally appeared, italicized
Journal title, italicized, where article originally appeared
Eble, Kenneth E. “The Great Gatsby and the Great American Novel." New Essays on
Author of article, last name first
Article title, in quotation
Publisher, copyright year, pages of book where article originally appeared.
‘The Great Gatsby’. Cambridge University Press, 1985. 79-100. Rpt. in Twentieth
PagesVol. number
Reprinted in
Century Literary Criticism. Vol. 98. Detroit: Gale, 1997.112-114. Print.
Title of Source, italicized
Publishing information City where published: Publisher, copyright.
2) Diagram of a critical article which was originally published in a MAGAZINE OR JOURNAL and republished in a literary criticism source (the source you are using) like CLC, TCLC, NCLC, Modern Critical Views, Bloom's Notes or any other collections of articles/essays.
Sisario, Peter. “A Study of the Allusions in Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451." English Journal
Author of article, last name first
Article title, in quotation
February 1970: 201-5,212. Rpt. in Contemporary Literary Criticism.
Pages
Pages
Title of Source, italicizedReprinted inDate
Vol. 98. Detroit: Gale, 1997. 112-114. Print.
Vol. number
Publishing information City where published: Publisher, copyright.
NOTE: If the article is from a scholarly journal the citation will look a little different. The date of the journal will be in parenthesis. If you see a volume number (21 in the example below), then the date will be in parentheses.
Johnson, Emily K. “Stephen King’s The Stand and Images of Horror.” The Sewanee
Literary Journal 21 (2007):21-28. Rpt. in Contemporary Literary Criticism.
Vol.98. Detroit: Gale, 1997. 112-114. Print.
3) Additional examples for citing previously published works in print:
Huntington, John. "Utopian and Anti-Utopian Logic: H.G. Wells and His Successors." Science
Fiction Studies 9 (July 1982): 122-46. Rpt. in Contemporary Literary Criticism. Ed.
Deborah A. Stanley. Vol. 98. Detroit: Gale, 1997. 112-114. Print.
Slusser, George Edgar. "Farenheit 451." The Bradbury Chronicles. 1977. Rpt. in Contemporary
Literary Criticism. Ed. Deborah A. Stanley. Vol.98. Detroit: Gale, 1997. 108-109. Print.
Townsell, Rhodena and William Allan Kritsonis. “Who in the World is Ayn Rand?” Doctoral
Forum: National Journal for Publishing and Mentoring Doctoral Research 4.7 (2007).
Rpt. in Novels for Students. Ed. Sara Constantakis. Vol. 29. Detroit: Gale, 2009. 57-61.
Print.
Xu, Ben. "Memory and the Ethnic Self: Reading Amy Tan's The Joy Luck Club." MELUS 19
(Spring 1994). Rpt. in Modern Critical Views: Amy Tan. Ed. Harold Bloom.
Philadelphia: Chelsea House, 2000. 43-57. Print.
4) Example citation for a previously published work in an ONLINE DATABASE:
Hint: Scroll down to the bottom of the article to find the complete citation. Check for accuracy and copy and paste to your works cited page. Mucher, Walter J. "Being Martian: Spatiotemporal Self in Ray Bradbury's The Martian
Chronicles." Extrapolation 43.2 (Summer 2002): 171. Literature Resource Center. Gale.
Web. 21 Oct. 2009.