MHRA Style Citation Demonstration
Click cover to enlarge | According to the MHRA Style Guide, this item should be cited in a bibliography as follows: O'Rawe, Catherine, Authorial Echoes: Textuality and Self-Plagiarism in the Narrative of Luigi Pirandello (Legenda, 2005) This is how standard MHRA style would look. Some of its book series (notably Legenda) allow an alternative citation system called 'author-date', but please talk to your editor before using it. (To see the demonstration for author-date, follow this link.) Let's take this bibliography entry one step at a time: Step 1. The entry begins with the author(s) or editor(s) of the volume, with the first name inverted into Surname, Forename. This is because a Bibliography is a list in surname order, so we need a surname up front. O'Rawe, Catherine Step 2. Now a comma, not a full stop: O'Rawe, Catherine, Step 3. Here we have the book's title, in italics, not quotation marks. O'Rawe, Catherine, Authorial Echoes: Textuality and Self-Plagiarism in the Narrative of Luigi Pirandello Step 4. Since this is a book, not a journal issue, we have to identify its source, in round brackets. Until 2024, MHRA style required a place of publication - for example, New York or Oxford. This is no longer given except in special circumstances. O'Rawe, Catherine, Authorial Echoes: Textuality and Self-Plagiarism in the Narrative of Luigi Pirandello ( Step 5. Now a colon, a space, and the publisher's name. Here that's Legenda because this is the imprint name under which the book is published, even though Legenda is not strictly speaking a company. To decide these things, one must look at the exact wording of the preliminary pages. Our preference is for Legenda books to be cited as 'Legenda', and we word our preliminaries with that aim. O'Rawe, Catherine, Authorial Echoes: Textuality and Self-Plagiarism in the Narrative of Luigi Pirandello (Legenda Step 6. Then the year of first publication, and we're done with the bracketed part. O'Rawe, Catherine, Authorial Echoes: Textuality and Self-Plagiarism in the Narrative of Luigi Pirandello (Legenda, 2005) And that's the finished bibliography entry. Note that there's no final full stop. So how about citations in footnotes or endnotes? In standard MHRA style, the first time the work is cited in a note, it should be cited in full. This looks very like a Bibliography entry, but:
Suppose we want to cite a passage on pages 24 to 27: 34 See Catherine O'Rawe, Authorial Echoes: Textuality and Self-Plagiarism in the Narrative of Luigi Pirandello (Legenda, 2005), pp. 24-27. But in any subsequent notes, a heavily abbreviated form is used: 37 Compare O'Rawe, p. 17. |
