Professional Documents
Culture Documents
2. Create a title at the top-center of the page. The title will be “Works Cited” (minus the
quotation marks).
4. Use CTRL + “T” to indent beginning on the second line of each entry. (This works on
Microsoft Word documents.)
5. The Works Cited page is a continuation of your essay, so the header and page number should
reflect this fact.
Works Cited
Differences: A Journal of Feminist Cultural Studies, vol. 7, no. 2, 1995, pp. 82-110.
Goldman, Anne. “Questions of Transport: Reading Primo Levi Reading Dante.” The Georgia
“A Guide to Exploring Four Dynamic New York Neighborhoods.” The New York Times, 10
york-neighborhoods.html.
Martinez, Ramon J., and Susan Smith. Acupuncture in Mexico. Cambridge UP, 2001.
Moran, Lee. “Cops Find Adorable Koala inside Wanted Woman’s Bag.” HuffPost, Verizon Media,
bag_us_58202b2fe4b0aac6248555b8?section=us_weird-news.
Smith, Susan, et al. Acupuncture in the Middle East. Oxford UP, 2012.
Stewart, Nathaniel. Current Medical Practices. 2nd ed., Yale UP, 2013.
---. “Pins and Needles.” Acupuncture in Canada, edited by George M. Jones, 5th ed., McGraw-
Tan, Amy. “Mother Tongue.” Models for Writers: Short Essays for Composition, edited by
Alfred Rosa and Paul Eschholz, 12th ed., Bedford / St. Martin’s, 2015, pp. 478-85.
Washington, Allan. “Update on the LA River Project.” Los Angeles Times, 6 July 2001, p. B1.
Washington, Emily. “CFS: New Discoveries.” Newsweek, 15 Mar. 1998, pp. 52-66. Academic