Have questions? Ask a librarian!
This guide was created by 2017-2018 Library Research Alumni Fellow Dykee Gorrell, then updated by 2018-2019 Library Research Alumni Fellow Elan Goldman. It is updated regularly by library staff. For students with questions about citing sources, you can contact a librarian with questions or make an appointment by emailing askharold@hampshire.edu.
These guides, from MIT, Duke, and Elon Libraries, show you how to cite media in all common citation styles.
Tool: a web-based or downloadable software program or application.
Citation: Delineates a source that is mentioned within the body of a document.
Reference: Contains the bibliographic information about a citation.
Bibliography: A formatted list of references cited within the text of a document. Also known as "reference list" or "works cited".
Footnote: A reference that appears at the bottom of a page within a document.
Endnote: A reference that appears in a bibliography at the end of a document.
Citation Generator: A tool that allows a user to input bibliographic information about a source which generates a formatted reference. The reference can then be inserted into a document.
Source: Glassman, N. R. (2018). Citation management tools : a practical guide for librarians. Rowman & Littlefield.
An in-text citation is the brief form of the reference that you include in the body of your work. It provides the basic information that reader will need in order to refer to the full citation listed in your References section (also known as Works Cited or Bibliography depending on the citation style you are using). The in-text citation generally takes one of two forms, parenthetical or narrative (note this format depends on citation style). Examples:
Parenthetical:
Library users most often visited the library and used the library's resources after 7pm on weeknights (Dylan et al., 2020).
Narrative:
According to a 2020 study by Dylan et al., library users most often visited the library and used the library's resources after 7pm on weeknights.