For example, if you’re looking at a report published on the American Heart Association website that doesn’t list an individual author, you would typically use the American Heart Association as the author. If you have a print source that doesn’t list a specific person as the author, look at the copyright information. If a corporation, nonprofit organization, or educational institution claims the copyright in the work, use that name as the author.

Example: The dark lord rises.

Example: The dark lord rises. (2019, April 22).

Example: The dark lord rises. (2019, April 22). Retrieved from http://www. thedailyprophet. org/dark-lord

Example: The rise of the dark lord. (2019). Paris, France: Beauxbatons Press.

Example: (“The Dark Lord,”

Example: (“The Dark Lord,” 2019).

For example, you might write: In 2019, an article titled “The Rise of the Dark Lord” shed new light on the politics behind Voldemort’s power grab. If you only included the title of the source in your paper, you would put a parenthetical immediately after the title with the year of publication. For example, you might write: Although there is no attributed author, “The Rise of the Dark Lord” (2019) is considered the most thorough documentation of Voldemort’s attempted rise to power. If you quoted from the source directly, the parenthetical with the page number goes at the end of the quote. For example, you might write: According to “The Rise of the Dark Lord” (2019), Voldemort sought not only political control but also control over “the very hearts and minds of every witch and wizard young and old” (p. 92).