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| MLA Style Manual and Guide to Scholarly Publishing, 3rd Edition | 
| Author: Modern Language Association Publisher: Modern Language Association of America Category: Book
List Price: $32.50 Buy New: $21.25 You Save: $11.25 (35%)
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Avg. Customer Rating:   (8 reviews) Sales Rank: 8995
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published) Media: Hardcover Edition: 3 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 336 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.5 Dimensions (in): 9.4 x 6.2 x 0.7
ISBN: 0873522974 Dewey Decimal Number: 808.027 EAN: 9780873522977 ASIN: 0873522974
Publication Date: June 30, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description Reorganized and revised, the third edition of the MLA Style Manual offers complete, up-to-date guidance on writing scholarly texts, documenting research sources, submitting manuscripts to publishers, and dealing with legal issues surrounding publication. New in the third edition: * a significant revision of MLA documentation style
* simplified citation formats for electronic sources * detailed advice on the review process used by scholarly journals and presses * a fully updated chapter on copyright, fair use, contracts, and other legal issues * guidelines on preparing electronic files * discussion of the electronic submission of a dissertation * a foreword by Domna C. Stanton on the current state of scholarly publishing * a preface by David G. Nicholls on what is new in the third edition MLA guides present the most accurate and complete information on MLA style.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 3 more reviews...
  MLA Style Manual and Guide to Scholarly Publishing November 12, 2008 This book does everything it is advertised to do.
A fault of the book: The book (on p. 214) should clarify what is considered the "title" of a web-page: Is it that which is written on the title bar, or the actual title heading the text?
However, I do not like the MLA citation style. In-text citations are much more intrusive than are footnotes or endnotes. They are also more difficult for the reader to match to the writer's documentation, if, for instance, the writer is using several works from the same source (e.g., the same government agency, where author's names are not usually given). In such a case, especially if the titles of the cited works are similar, the long title would have to be inserted parenthetically in the text, instead of just having a footnote number. It is a cumbersome citation style.
  Necessary item for anyone involved in writing October 22, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
This product is a must for anyone studying English Literature. It will walk you through correctly citing books, articles, movies etc. It will also show you how to organize an annotated bibliography. This is the newest edition and since it's published every 5 years you're good to go until 2013.
  MLA book October 13, 2008 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
This is a mandatory document I need for school. I know it is going to be helpful. Everything I need to know is in there.
  An essential and indispensable reference September 6, 2008 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
The Modern Language Association is referenced throughout academia and the publishing industry as the standard setter for matters of grammar and other aspects of writing. Now available in a newly updated and expanded third edition, the "MLA Style Manual: And Guide to Scholarly Publishing" is their thoroughly comprehensive and 'user friendly' guide for publishing a useful reference that will be especially appreciated by those new to publishing and an indispensable reference for anyone needing a reference work on publishing standards. The newly expanded and updated third edition offers invaluable and practical advice on a broad spectrum of publishing issues ranging from stating sources and electronic submission, to new information on copyright and fair use practices. "MLA Style Manual" is an essential and indispensable reference work for any publishing company or self-published author looking for the best way to make their books viable in today's volatile and competitive marketplace.
  A Shocking Debacle! August 18, 2008 10 out of 12 found this review helpful
NOTE: The previous three reviews, obviously, are reviews of the previous, second edition of this manual; I address the current, third edition--and only with regard to citation format.
The changes this edition introduces, on the whole, constitute a catastrophe for the MLA. If these changes are reflected in the next edition of the _MLA Handbook_, most students, scholars, teachers, and professors in the humanities are sure to abandon the MLA. Here are just a few of the inexplicable gaffes I have noticed so far:
1. DELETION OF THE APPENDIX ON FOOTNOTES/ENDNOTES (former Appendix A). This is the whopper. Most students and scholars in the humanities use footnotes/endnotes. Without the old appendix--which should never have been a mere appendix, to begin with--the book is rendered useless to most students and scholars. Certainly, teachers and professors can no longer recommend it, or any subsequent edition of the _MLA Handbook_ based on it, to their students.
2. PLACEMENT OF SERIES INFORMATION AT END OF CITATIONS (section 6.6.15, formerly 6.6.16). This one baffles me. Who could think such placement even remotely aesthetically pleasing? On a practical level, such placement tends to burry the ever-so-important year of publication.
3. UBIQUITOUS MEDIUM OF PUBLICATION DATA. Okay, this one baffles me too. Despite feeble protestations to the contrary, "print" and "film" are default assumptions within their respective domains. Having to write those designations at the end of all relevant citations is silly, superfluous, ugly, wordy, and a waste of ink and paper. Aren't we supposed to be "green" now?
4. CITATION OF ONLINE SOURCES. Yet another baffler! Anyone who thinks getting rid of URL addresses in citations is a good idea is just plain nuts. URLs are the easiest way of locating websites. The editors' argument that reproducing URLs is a process prone to error is specious. A simple "copy and paste" operation solves the problem easily and quickly. With citations of online sources, more is better--though, obviously, with a URL, the "web" designation would be superfluous.
5. DELETION OF BRACKETED ELLIPSES (former and current section 3.9.5). Bracketed ellipses provided the simplest way of distinguishing between original and inserted ellipses. Now, one must return to the parenthetical "ellipsis in original."
6. DELETION OF METHOD OF INDICATING ITALICS/UNDERSCORING ELECTRONICALLY (former and current section 3.5). The old recommendation was ideally suited for online boards and chatrooms and for email.
7. ERROR REGARDING COMPLETE PUBLICATION DATA FOR SPECIAL ISSUES OF JOURNALS. The end of section 6.5.13 claims to provide guidance for those wishing to provide full publication data but provides no publication data. Presumably, the intent must have been along the lines of the final example of section 6.6.16.
I have found only two welcome changes in this edition: (1) the long-overdue change from underscoring to italics; and (2) the revised format for republished journal issues, section 6.6.16, though this latter matter is rather subtle. Otherwise, as far as I have been able to check thus far, the new edition's changes in citation format are a travesty. The next edition of the _MLA Handbook_ must ignore this edition, which must be discontinued at once; otherwise, the MLA will find its influence greatly diminished and its publications staff downsized. As a longtime user of MLA format (with footnotes), it saddens me that I may have no choice but to turn to and recommend _The Chicago Manual of Style_ in the future. Certainly, I will be using this edition only as a paperweight.
For citation style, I still recommend the current, sixth edition of the _MLA Handbook_ above all other guides.
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