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Quotes and Citations Excitement Galore

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All information that would be considered common knowledge. Anything that we would consider ... Maggie, on the other hand, is typical prey of the Bowery jungle. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Quotes and Citations Excitement Galore


1
Quotes and Citations Excitement Galore!
  • Citing sources
  • Setting up Quotes
  • Integrating quotes

2
To Cite or Not to Cite
3
What does not need to be cited?
  • All information that would be considered common
    knowledge
  • Anything that we would consider encyclopedia
    information (birthdays, basic statistics, basic
    facts)
  • Anything that is your idea or opinion (although
    these need to be supported with facts and
    information)

4
What does need to be cited?
  • The exact words of another
  • Primary source quotes from literature
  • A dictionary definition that must be precise
  • The original ideas, research, critical analysis,
    or opinions of another (even if paraphrased in
    your words)

5
When should I quote?
  • When what is said is stated much better than you
    could ever say it.
  • When it is something that must be exact like a
    definition or a formula
  • When the quote adds dimension, meaning, or
    insight to your supporting point

6
If I dont quote, what are my options?
  • Paraphrase
  • Summary
  • Still need to cite these if not common
    knowledge

7
QUOTING!!!A quote should be sandwiched between
the point you are trying to make and your
follow-up analysis of how the quote demonstrates
that point.
  • I. Set up the quote by stating your point.
  • II. Attribute the quote with a dialogue tag
    introducing the speaker of the quote.
  • III. Cite the quote in parentheses (last name
    pg).
  • IV. Analyze how the quote proves your point.

8
STEP 1 Set up your quote.
  • Set up the quote before integrating it. Take
    enough time to reveal the context without
    summarizing plot.

9
STEP 2 Attribute quote.
  • Do NOT do the following in introducing your
    quote
  • Heres a quote by
  • The book says . . .
  • The quote says . . .
  • In the following quote
  • This can be seen in the quote

10
STEP 2 Attribute quote, cont.
  • Make sure you attribute the quote to someone.
    Tell us who is speaking!
  • Formal (Needs a comma)
  • Rudkus says,
  • Rudkus notes the physical deformities among the
    workers, saying
  • As Sinclair explains,
  • Informal (part of your sentence doesnt need a
    comma)
  • Jurgis describes a workday that began at four
    oclock in the morning

11
STEP 3 Cite the quote
  • Ex Jurgis says, Each in its way was as horrible
    as the killing beds (Sinclair 305).
  • If author is mentioned in body of your essay, do
    not need it again in citation Ex Sinclair
    describes a workday that began at four oclock
    in the morning (305).

12
Use parenthetical citations also for indirect
quotes or critical analysis of another
  • Indirect Quote
  • After observing the factory, Rudkus notices that
    many of the workers have physical deformities as
    reminders of the brutal tasks they perform daily.
    (Sinclair 305)
  • Paraphrase of critical analysis
  • Critic Arthur Goldblum sees the novel as a
    seething indictment of unregulated industry
    during the Progressive era. (Muckrakers 12)

13
STEP 4 Analyze the quote
  • Do not explain the quote we understand. Make a
    more sophisticated analysis of the quote by tying
    it to your thesis or main point.

14
When does a quote lose its effectiveness?
  • When its too long (People tend not to read
    beyond a certain point)
  • When its not properly set up integrated
  • When you dont take enough time for the reader
    to understand its significance
  • When it has little to do with the point you are
    trying to make

15
MODEL QUOTE INTEGRATION
  • Maggie, on the other hand, is typical prey of the
    Bowery jungle. Naïve and inexperienced when she
    meets Pete, Maggie immediately places all her
    hope and future in that relationship. Crane
    describes how Maggie leaned with a dependent air
    toward her companion timid, as if fearing his
    anger or displeasure (39). Here, Maggie takes
    on the submissive role of the relationship,
    becoming vulnerable to predators like Pete and
    Nell. Even after Pete leaves her, Maggie fails
    to adapt to her harsh environment, leading to her
    death or natural selection.
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