Step by Step with MLA Bibliography
MLA Bibliography is one of the library's databases for journal articles that critique literary works. It offers extensive coverage of anything having to do with the humanities along with a familiar interface.
- To reach MLA Bibliography, go to GALILEO
http://www.galileo.usg.edu
and click the Databases A-Z tab, which is a gold
tab located in a row near the top of GALILEO's screen.
- Next, choose M.
- Click on MLA Bibliography.
- Check off the full text box so you will receive mainly
full text articles.
- In the large box on the center of the screen, type in your
search statement. Basic Search works best for searching
for everything on a particular work. Type in the title of a particular
work and then click the Search button.
For more complex searches, those with two or more concepts, write down your search topic and choose two words that describe your topic's main ideas. For example, Amy Tan's women characters yield the search statement, Tan AND women. Here is how the computer sees it.
The AND is not a word. Rather, it is a mathematical operator which means the overlap between two ideas.
- MLA presents you with a list of references. Use the scroll bar to
move up and down within a page of references.
- To move from one page of references to the next, use the blue
Next or Previous link or the page numbers at
the top and bottom of the reference list.
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- To print an article, click on Ebsco's print icon.
- To email an article, click on Ebsco's email icon and fill out the form.
- To save an article to a folder you can open at home, login to your personal Ebsco account and then click on the folder icon.
- To end your search in MLA Bibliography, simply close the browser window.
MLA Bibliography Advanced Search
If you are visually oriented, want more space and flexibility, or plan to try several related searches, then MLA's Advanced Search is for you.
- Instead of using an AND between
ideas in a search statement, in Advanced Search you fill separate rows
with your ideas, one row per idea.
- You can also put two or more synonyms for one idea together using
OR, a mathematical
operator that joins synonyms as a single idea.
- In Advanced Search, fill in the multibox.
Select Full Text, and click Search.
- If you want to modify an Advanced Search, edit one or more rows in the Advanced Search multibox near the top of the screen.