How Do You Cite An Internet Image In A Bibliography In MLA Style?
Modern Language Association (MLA) style guidelines require a “Works Cited” page to be the final section of a paper or article. This list of all the works that have been quoted, summarized or paraphrased must be arranged alphabetically by the author’s last name or by title when there is no author identified. According to the University of Maryland University College, the “MLA provides limited guidance on citing images,” but all images, whether from books, institutions, private collections or the internet, that are included in the paper or article, must be cited as well. Provide the artist’s full name: last name and then first name. Example: O’Keeffe, Georgia. Add the title in italics of the work of art. Example: Red Hills with White Shell (in italics). If the image is untitled, create your own brief title describing the piece. Do not italicize this descriptive title or put it in quotes. Capitalize only the first word and any proper nouns. Continue with the year the work was created. Spe