Q&A for How to Cite Shakespeare in MLA

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  • Question
    How do I format a reproduced Shakespeare quote on my paper?
    Marissa Levis
    English Teacher
    Marissa Levis is an English Teacher in the Morris County Vocational School District. She previously worked as an English director at a tutoring center that caters to students in elementary and middle school. She is an expert in creating a curriculum that helps students advance their skills in secondary-level English, focusing on MLA formatting, reading comprehension, writing skills, editing and proofreading, literary analysis, standardized test preparation, and journalism topics. Marissa received her Master of Arts in Teaching from Fairleigh Dickinson University.
    English Teacher
    Expert Answer
    It's the same as your first Shakespeare citation. It all boils down to the number of lines that you're citing. Things like remembering to use line breaks (slashes) for verse and following standard citation practices for prose. Also, when citing over three lines, format the quote as a block quote to indicate its significance. 
  • Question
    How do you format more than two lines in a play by Shakespeare? Do you use a / when citing more than one line?
    Community Answer
    Yes -- when those two lines are written in verse. If they are prose lines (such as when Hamlet is pretending to be mad), there is no need to use a slash to separate them.
  • Question
    What if the edition is online and does not have a published date?
    Torpi
    Top Answerer
    Double-check for any information at all indicating when the page was uploaded or last edited. If it exists, use that as the date. Otherwise, skip the date in your in-text citations. For your bibliography, add the website title in italics, after all of the other information. Then, add the URL or DOI of the page (DOI is better if you have it - but if you don't know what that is, don't worry about it). Finish the citation with "Accessed" and then the date you last accessed the page, in Day Month Year format (e.g. "Accessed 16 May 2020").
  • Question
    Is this for MLA 8 or an older version?
    Sarah Jane Burke
    Community Answer
    You must always cite using the most recent updated referencing system for your academic category. English is MLA 8th edition. Most universities have referencing guides on the websites which are accessible to the public. It it good practice to write it by hand so you gain muscle memory for the correct layout. Alternatively, if you are short of time there are referencing websites that have engines which will generate the reference for you, you only need to supply the book's details.
  • Question
    Why has the citation format changed from Roman numerals? As in (IV.iii.12-15) as opposed to (4.3.12-15)?
    Torpi
    Top Answerer
    To being plays in to standard with the rest of MLA format, in which Arabic numerals are always used except for fore-matter in a book that uses Roman numerals as page numbers.
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