Citing A Newspaper Article In An Essay

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Mystikal Vadlapatla

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Jul 10, 2024, 3:41:29 AM7/10/24
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Cite a newspaper article as you would a magazine article, but note the different pagination in most newspapers. If there is more than one edition available for that date (as in an early and late edition of a newspaper), identify the edition after the newspaper title.

Table of contents

  1. Citing a newspaper article in MLA Style
  2. Citing a newspaper article in APA Style
  3. Citing a newspaper article in Chicago Style
  4. Frequently asked questions about citations

citing a newspaper article in an essay


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In an APA Style newspaper article reference, the article title is in plain text with sentence-style capitalization, the name of the newspaper in italics with headline capitalization. Include a URL if the article was accessed online. The APA in-text citation omits the page number if unavailable.

If you accessed the article in a print newspaper, the reference entry includes the page number(s) of the article instead of the URL. Newspaper page numbers are sometimes written with a combination of letters and numerals (e.g. D4); the letters should be retained.

The elements included in a newspaper article citation across APA, MLA, and Chicago style are the author name, the article title, the publication date, the newspaper name, and the URL if the article was accessed online.

When it comes to how to cite a newspaper article, you must understand that MLA 8 uses nine core elements within a container system. This allows for flexibility while creating citations, guiding your readers to the relevant section of your citation source. When writing citation sources for print newspaper articles, follow the basic MLA periodical format.

To make a newspaper citation for an online article, you need to vary your format by adding the URL. You can often find newspaper articles online through reputable sources, such as the Washington Post. They let you view two or three articles per month for free.

In addition to print and online, you can cite newspaper articles on a database. Your school or library provides access to databases that include archived issues. To cite newspapers on a database, you include the database information at the end of the citation.

Magazine and newspaper articles can be primary or secondary sources, depending on the content. Secondary sources should be used sparingly in your MLA school paper. Items published by a newspaper that are primary sources include:

Finding newspaper articles for your MLA humanities paper is an excellent way to add current information to your discussion. Since newspapers are periodicals, they are published regularly, usually daily or weekly.

To create an in-text citation for a newspaper article, you include the author's last name and page number (Rice 16). However, if the article is located online or only on one page, you list the author's last name (Rice).

Newspaper articles are excellent sources of information for students of academic texts. Historically, newspapers have provided a platform for writers to use information about pertinent issues, such as public policy, health care, and education. As such, students and researchers use reliable articles to find information that strengthens or validates their arguments, claims, opinions, or observations about a specific issue. When citing a newspaper article in the APA 7th edition, a writer needs to cover specific details. In turn, these elements include the author(s), dates of publication, titles of articles, newspaper name, and the URL. Hence, students need to learn how to cite a newspaper article in APA 7 to use evidence correctly.

Every time when students or researchers use a newspaper article as a source in their writing, they must cite it as per the rules of the applicable paper format. Concerning APA 7th edition, citations of newspaper articles should capture specific features. Hence, these elements include:

Students can use newspaper articles to back up their claims and arguments when writing academic texts like essays, while they need to cite them by following the rules of APA 7. In turn, some tips for citing a newspaper article in APA 7 are:

The title of the periodical (journal, magazine, or newspaper) is italicized. The title of the article or work is enclosed in quotations. Omit any introductory article in the newspaper title for English-language newspapers (Palm Beach Post, not The Palm Beach Post). Retain the article in non-English language newspapers (Le monde).

Historic newspapers provide a glimpse of historic time periods. The articles, as well as the advertising, are an appealing way to get a look at the regions of the country or the world and the issues of the day.

To cite an online newspaper article in MLA style, you need to have basic information including the author, publication date, title of the article, newspaper name, and the URL. The templates for in-text citations and works-cited-list entries of an online newspaper article, along with examples, are given below for one author:

The title of the article is in plain text and title case; it is placed inside quotation marks. The newspaper name is given in italics. Follow the format given in the template and example for writing the date, month, and year.

The general rule is to use quotation marks for titles of short works such as articles, poems, songs, essays, or short stories. By contrast, use italics for larger works such as books, movies, and the names of periodicals. We provide a complete list below.

Use quotation marks for the titles of articles, essays, poems, short stories, songs, chapters, lectures, pages for websites, episodes of serial works (such as TV shows or podcasts), names of sections or parts in larger works, and short-form videos such as those on YouTube.

Im currently writing MSc level essays. Im trying to keep most of my sources academic but sometimes newspapers provide better quotes, more current information, etc. Does it look bad if I cite newspapers rather than academic sources? Im speaking about 'proper' newspapers like the NY Times or FT.

Most research papers can be written using only peer-reviewed journal articles as sources. However, for many topics it is possible to find a plethora of sources that have not been peer-reviewed but also discuss the topic. These may include articles in popular magazines or postings in blogs, forums, and other websites. In general, although these sources may be well-written and easy to understand, their scientific value is often not as high as that of peer-reviewed articles. Exceptions include some magazine and newspaper articles that might be cited in a research paper to make a point about public awareness of a given topic, to illustrate beliefs and attitudes about a given topic among journalists, or to refer to a news event that is relevant to a given topic.

This is due to one of the principles of academic writing: The starting point of any study, book, journal article or student essay is always to look at what already exists on the topic. What have other scholars written on it, and how does your book/article/essay build on this existing body of knoweldge? In the hierarchy of knowledge claims (at least as academics see it), academic studies, that is ones that were conducted by university-trained staff, usually within the institutional framework of a university, and peer-reviewed before publication, are considered of the highest quality. And it is only on these foundations that your essay or dissertation will be considered a sound and trustworthy piece of writing.

The third, somewhat less common instance of using non-academic sources in your essay is when you want to discuss a claim or hypothesis made in, for example, an editorial of a newspaper, a political speech, or a blog or podcast of a renowned academic. This last example is indeed where it can become confusing, as the person making claims here is an academic (hence this is kind of an academic source), but the format in which it is made is non-academic, and not peer-reviewed. The short answer is that this should be treated like a non-academic source, as the peer-review process trumps the university affiliation. The longer answer, however, is that some sources can be considered more trustworthy than others, and in the hierarchy of trustworthiness, academics tend to be pretty high up. Use your own judgment, though. There are some academics that bullshit their way through the world wide web. You might have heard of Jordan Peterson.

The Federalist, commonly referred to as the Federalist Papers, is a series of 85 essays written by Alexander Hamilton, John Jay, and James Madison between October 1787 and May 1788. The essays were published anonymously, under the pen name "Publius," in various New York state newspapers of the time.

The Federalist Papers were published primarily in two New York state newspapers: The New York Packet and The Independent Journal. They were reprinted in other newspapers in New York state and in several cities in other states. A bound edition, with revisions and corrections by Hamilton, was published in 1788 by printers J. and A. McLean. An edition published by printer Jacob Gideon in 1818, with revisions and corrections by Madison, was the first to identify each essay by its author's name. Because of its publishing history, the assignment of authorship, numbering, and exact wording may vary with different editions of The Federalist.

When citing journal articles, include the name of the author as it appears on the first page of the article. In addition, use the abbreviation for the name of the journal in which the article is published. A list of law journal abbreviations can be found in Appendix D of the McGill Guide, or you can use the Cardiff Index to Legal Abbreviations. For non-law journals, just write out the title of the journal in full.

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