Create a bibliographic entry for a newly printed edition of an original source. This bibliographic entry will fall at the end of your written work on the "Works Cited" page. In this citation style, include the original print date as well as the newer edition print date. Start with the last name and the first name of the author. Next, include the title of the work (underlined), the editor of the new edition (if available), the original print year, the location of the new edition and the year of the new edition. For example: Dreiser, Theodore. Sister Carrie. Ed. Donald Pizer. 1900. New York: Norton Critical Edition, 1970.
Each line after the first line should be indented in the Works Cited.
Create a bibliographic entry for a work in an edited volume or anthology. Once again, focus on citing the actual printed version of the text you consulted in your writing. Begin with the author's last name and first name, the title of the article or chapter (in quotation marks), the title of the whole volume (underlined), the editor's name, the location of the publication and the publisher. Finally, include the year of publication and range of pages of the article or chapter. For instance: Smith, John. "The Title of An Essay." A Volume of Essays. Ed. John Doe and John Kay. Anytown, OK: Publications Press, 2008. 50-78.
Note that the period falls inside the quotation marks surrounding the title.
Use an in-text parenthetical citation for the reprinted source. Place the author's last name and the specific page you are citing in parentheses at the end of the sentence in which you used the information. For example: "Smith alludes to the changes of society in his classic article on human interactions (Smith 77)."