Bibliography
BY: Inzamam Afzal
Bibliography
• A bibliography is a list of all of the sources you have
used (whether referenced or not) in the process of
researching your work.
Or
• A bibliography is a list of works (such as books and
articles) written on a particular subject or by a
particular author.
Main Points
• A bibliography may appear at the end
of a book, report, online presentation,
or research paper.
• Students are taught that a bibliography,
along with correctly formatted in-text
citations, is crucial to properly citing for
ones work and to avoiding accusations
of plagiarism.
A bibliography should include:
• In general, the authors' names
• The titles of the works
• The names and locations of the
companies that published your copies
of the sources
• The dates your copies were published
• The page numbers of your sources (if
they are part of multi-source volumes)
Annotated Bibliography VS
Bibliography
• An annotated bibliography is the same
as a bibliography
• But one difference in an annotated
bibliography, the bibliographic
information is followed by a brief
description of the content, quality, and
usefulness of the source.
It Includes
• Basic bibliographic information
includes title, author or editor,
publisher, and the year the current
edition was published or copyrighted.
Different Styles
• There are several different styles of citations
and bibliographies that you might encounter:
MLA, APA, Chicago, Harvard, and more
APA Style
• In an entry for a book in an APA Style works-
cited list, the date (in parentheses)
immediately follows the name of the author
(whose first name is written only as an initial),
just the first word of the title is capitalized,
and the publisher's full name is generally
provided.
MLA Style
• By contrast, in an MLA Style entry, the
author's name appears as given in the work
(normally in full), every important word of the
title is capitalized, some words in the
publisher's name are abbreviated, the
publication date follows the publisher's name,
and the medium of publication is recorded. . .
. In both styles, the first line of the entry is
flush with the left margin, and the second and
subsequent lines are indented.
Bibliography

Bibliography

  • 1.
  • 3.
    Bibliography • A bibliographyis a list of all of the sources you have used (whether referenced or not) in the process of researching your work. Or • A bibliography is a list of works (such as books and articles) written on a particular subject or by a particular author.
  • 4.
    Main Points • Abibliography may appear at the end of a book, report, online presentation, or research paper. • Students are taught that a bibliography, along with correctly formatted in-text citations, is crucial to properly citing for ones work and to avoiding accusations of plagiarism.
  • 5.
    A bibliography shouldinclude: • In general, the authors' names • The titles of the works • The names and locations of the companies that published your copies of the sources • The dates your copies were published • The page numbers of your sources (if they are part of multi-source volumes)
  • 6.
    Annotated Bibliography VS Bibliography •An annotated bibliography is the same as a bibliography • But one difference in an annotated bibliography, the bibliographic information is followed by a brief description of the content, quality, and usefulness of the source.
  • 7.
    It Includes • Basicbibliographic information includes title, author or editor, publisher, and the year the current edition was published or copyrighted.
  • 8.
    Different Styles • Thereare several different styles of citations and bibliographies that you might encounter: MLA, APA, Chicago, Harvard, and more
  • 9.
    APA Style • Inan entry for a book in an APA Style works- cited list, the date (in parentheses) immediately follows the name of the author (whose first name is written only as an initial), just the first word of the title is capitalized, and the publisher's full name is generally provided.
  • 10.
    MLA Style • Bycontrast, in an MLA Style entry, the author's name appears as given in the work (normally in full), every important word of the title is capitalized, some words in the publisher's name are abbreviated, the publication date follows the publisher's name, and the medium of publication is recorded. . . . In both styles, the first line of the entry is flush with the left margin, and the second and subsequent lines are indented.

Editor's Notes

  • #7 An annotated bibliography includes a brief descriptive and evaluative paragraph (the annotation) for each item in the list. These annotations often give more context about why a certain source may be useful or related to the topic at hand.
  • #9 As described above, each of those styles is often associated with a particular segment of academia and research. Of these, the most widely used are APA and MLA styles. They both include similar information, but arranged and formatted differently.