For more help, see Tips for Citing Magazine Articles below, and explainers on how to tell the difference between Journals, Magazines, and Newspapers.
Works Cited List Citation |
Author's Last Name, First Name. "Title of Article." Title of Magazine, vol. Volume Number if given, no. Issue Number if given, Day Month Year of Publication, pp. Page Numbers if given. Database Name. Note: If you are citing an opinion or editorial piece, add the following at the end of your citation: Op-ed. Note: If the article pages are not in consecutive order, list the first page number of the article followed by a plus (+) sign. Examples: One Author Piore, Adam. “Is Bitcoin Too Big to Fail?” Newsweek, vol. 126, no. 10, 9 Apr. 2021. Canadian Business & Current Affairs. Two Authors Kotkin, Joel, and Marshall Toplansky. "A New Age of Reconnaissance: Entrepreneurs are Leading the Way to Space." National Review, vol. 73, no. 5, 22 Mar. 2021, p. 28+. ABI/INFORM. Three or More Authors Berman-Vaporis, Irene, et al. "The State of Women." National Geographic, vol. 38, no. 6, Dec. 2020, p. 32+. Gale Academic OneFile. No Author "The Zoom Where It Happens." The Economist, vol. 439, no. 9243, 1 May 2021. Canadian Business & Current Affairs. |
In-Text Citation |
(Last Name Page Number if given) or if there's no author ("Title of Article" Page Number if given) Examples: (Lee) (Kotkin and Toplansky 30) (Berman-Vaporis et al. 35) ("The Zoom" 2) Note: If the source has a long title, you may shorten it in your in-text citation by using the first word/phrase from the title. |
For more help, see Tips for Citing Magazine Articles below, and explainers on how to tell the difference between Journals, Magazines, and Newspapers.
Works Cited List Citation |
Author's Last Name, First Name. "Title of Article." Title of Magazine, vol. Volume Number if given, no. Issue Number if given, Day Month Year of Publication, URL. Note: If you are citing an opinion or editorial piece, add the following at the end of your citation: Op-ed. Examples: One Author Waite, Kevin. “The Bloody History of Anti-Asian Violence in the West” National Geographic, 10 May 2021, www.nationalgeographic.com/history/article/the-bloody-history-of-anti-asian-violence-in-the-west. Two Authors Seif, Martin, and Sally Winston. "Chronic Indecisiveness: Between a Rock and a Hard Place." Psychology Today, 9 May 2021, www.psychologytoday.com/ca/blog/living-sticky-mind/202105/chronic-indecisiveness-between-rock-and-hard-place. Three or More Authors Smith, Marie-Danielle, et al. "The Rise and Fall of WE." Maclean's, 9 Sept. 2020, www.macleans.ca/longforms/we-charity-kielburgers-scandal/. No Author "The Digital Currencies That Matter." The Economist, 8 May 2021, www.economist.com/leaders/2021/05/08/the-digital-currencies-that-matter. |
In-Text Citation |
(Last Name) or if there's no author ("Title of Article") Examples: (Waite) (Seif and Winston) (Smith et al.) ("The Digital Currencies") Note: If the source has a long title, you may shorten it in your in-text citation by using the first word/phrase from the title. |
For more help, see Tips for Citing Magazine Articles below, and explainers on how to tell the difference between Journals, Magazines, and Newspapers.
Works Cited List Citation |
Author's Last Name, First Name. "Title of Article." Title of Magazine, vol. Volume Number if given, no. Issue Number if given, Day Month Year of Publication, pp. Page Numbers. Note: If you are citing an opinion or editorial piece, add the following at the end of your citation: Op-ed. Note: If the article pages are not in consecutive order, list the first page number of the article followed by a plus (+) sign. Example: Mull, Amanda. “Generation Work-From-Home May Never Recover” The Atlantic, Oct. 2020, pp. 30-2. |
In-Text Citation |
(Last Name Page Number) Examples: (Mull 31) |
Not sure whether your article is from a magazine? Look for these characteristics:
Popular magazines:
Trade magazines:
Articles may also come from journals or newspapers.
Photo from Flickr under Creative Commons license, created by the.Firebottle
Not sure whether your article is from a journal? Look for these characteristics:
Articles may also come from magazines or newspapers.
Not sure whether your article is from a newspaper? Look for these characteristics:
For all content found on the Web, you must list the date you first viewed the resource. This comes last in a citation. The exception to this rule is that you do not list access date for content found in library databases.
An author can be a person but can also be an organization, or company. These are called group or corporate authors.
The name of the database will usually appear at the top of the search screen. Note that Elsevier, Gale and EBSCOhost are NOT database names, they are database providers. The name of the database will appear separately.
If you have used the function to search multiple databases at once and therefore do not know the individual database name, enter the name of the database provider (e.g. ProQuest) as the database.
The format of all dates is: Date Month (shortened) Year. E.g. 5 Sept. 2012.
If no page number is listed, write n. pag. in the Works Cited list.
If the entire article is only one page, do not include a page number in the in-text citation.
If the article appears on non-consecutive pages (e.g., the article starts on page 5 then continues on page 12), write the first page number and a plus (+) sign. E.g., 5+
Capitalize the first letter of every important word in the title. You do not need to capitalize words such as: in, of, or an.
If there is a colon (:) in the title, include what comes after the colon (also known as the subtitle).
|
|