Searching MLA Bibliography by Subject
The MLA Bibliography (MLA) is published by the Modern
Language Association. Therefore, it includes citations for sources
about all modern (i.e. contemporary) languages (except materials related
to pedagogy), literature, folklore, and linguistics. However, note
that for the literature portion of the MLA (emphasized on this
Web page) that an author's works first must be deemed "literature"
before inclusion in the MLA. Once deemed literary, MLA
gives as comprehensive as possible coverage of materials about that
author's works.
The electronic MLA
Bibliography 1926- is available from the "Databases"
page to CSU affiliates. It includes "over 1.5 million citations
from more than 4,400 journals and series and 1,000 book publishers."
In addition, CSU owns the printed version of the MLA from 1921-1991
found at Z 6519 .M53 Location MOVABLE SHELVES (lower level South);
unfortunately twenty volumes (as in books--some of these have more
than one "volume" of the MLA) are damaged and not available.
The opening search page of the electronic MLA Bibliography
looks like this:

Subject Searching in the MLA
To do effective subject searching you need to know a bit about how
MLA assigns terms. The terms discussed on this page are listed
in full citations under General Subject Areas or Subject
" Terms. Selecting "SU Subject" from the drop down menu on the search
screen has MLA search terms in the subject fields.
Era/Time Subject Searches
Usual practice in referring to eras of writing is by century; for
instance, "18th century English novels." Therefore, researchers
looking for materials on that topic might think that including "18th
century" in their searches would be helpful. Wrong. MLA
assigns "1700-1799" to the 18th century. It is important
that researchers keep this in mind or they will have unproductive
searches.
Example groups of dates actually used by the MLA are: 400-1699;
400-1499; 1500-1599; 1600-1699; 1700-1799; 1800-1899; 1900-1999.
Author Subject Searches
Another important thing to learn about MLA is that each author
is assigned a country and a century (the one most closely associated
with her/him), which can be confusing when an author emigrated from
his/her native land and/or lived and wrote in two centuries. For example,
Joseph Conrad (1857-1924), born in the Ukraine with a few significant
works published in the 19th Century (e.g. Almayer's Folly and
Heart of Darkness), is listed under English-literature 1900-1999.
All materials written by Conrad are listed under English literature
1900-1999.
Country of Work Searches (National Literatures)--English Language
Literature
Use the geographic areas listed below with "literature"
to identify works from a specific country or area. For example, search
for "Irish literature" to find books written by Irish authors.
- (British and Irish) English; Irish; Manx; Scottish; Welsh; Breton
- (Commonwealth) Australian; Canadian; New Zealand
- (English Caribbean) Barbadian; Belizean; Dominica (W.I.); Grenadian;
Guyanese; Jamaican; St. Kitts; St. Lucian; Trinidad and Tobago
- (American (United States of America)) American
Format/Genre of Works
Searchable formats include:
- novel
- prose
- short story
- letters
- bibliography
- fiction
- poetry
|
- drama
- theater
- criticism
- periodicals
- romance
- biography
|
Type of Novel Searches
Identified types of writing can be searched for by subject. For example:
The Gothic; Gothic conventions; Gothic fiction; Gothic literature;
Gothic melodrama; Gothic novel; Gothic romance; Gothicism
You may need to use a term in a variety of ways to be certain that
you have made a comprehensive search for materials on that topic.
Subject matter
MLA uses "treatment of" before topics. Examples:
- Treatment of: advertising; food; heroism; pain knight; femininity;
anger; black-identity; devotion; reality; male-bonding; classical-myth;
discrimination; Cold-War; remembrance; dualism; political-prison;
health; automobile; religion; existence; love; veterans; women;
girls'-education; criticism; city; African-American-community; gender;
workers; format.
- Also, treatment of [name of character]-character, for example,
- treatment of Du-Bois,-Blanche-character
- treatment of Q-character
- treatment of Heathcliff-character
- treatment of Fleming,-Henry-character
MLA uses "relationship to" before topics. Examples:
- Relationship to: identity; politics; kinship; American-dream;
postmodernism; time; imperialism; aestheticism; emancipation-of-women;
effeminacy; American-nationalism; English-identity; antidepressant;
seaside-resorts
MLA uses "compared to." Examples:
- Compared to: American poetry; English poetry; praise; English-language-modern;
architecture; cultural-studies; speakers; Jewish-women; Argentinian-literature;
folk-belief-systems; legal-cases; film
- Also, compared to [author], for example,
MLA uses "role of." Examples:
- Role of: judge; sublime; originality; binary-opposition; literacy-studies;
reading; dissociation; cultural-studies; culture; language-transfer;
output; reader-response; meaning-negotiation; aestheticism; musical
setting; tourism
American Literature Searches, Author Group, Geographic Area, or
Women
One category of American literature search is by author race/ethnic
group. Examples (there are more) are:
- African American Novelists; Italian American novelists; Jewish
American novelists; Mexican American novelists; Native American
novelists; Spanish American novelists; African American poets; Arab
American poets; Italian American poets; Mexican American poets;
Native American poets; American writers; African American writers;
Appalachian writers; Armenian American writers; Asian American writers;
Beat Generation; Chinese American writers; Cuban American writers;
German American writers; Greek American writers; Hispanic American
writers; Irish American writers; Italian American writers; Jewish
American writers; Lost Generation; Mexican American writers; Native
American writers; New York Intellectuals; Southern American writers;
Spanish American writers; American men; African American men
Another category of searchable American literature is by geographic
area. For example:
- Midwestern American novelists; Southern American Novelists; Midwestern
American poets
Women authors are also categorized by race/ethic group and geographic
area (examples):
- American women critics; African American women critics; American
women dramatists; African American women dramatists; Mexican American
women dramatists; American women novelists; African American women
novelists; Southern American women novelists; White American women
novelists; American women poets; African American women poets; Mexican
American women poets; Native American women poets; American women
writers; African American women writers; Asian American women writers;
Caribbean American women writers; Chinese American women writers;
Cuban American women writers; German American women writers; Japanese
American women writers; Mexican American women writers; Native American
women writers; Southern American women writers.
Citations about/Treatment of Ethic/Race Groups, Artists/Writers,
Women, and Other Groups
- English women; Victorian women; English writers; Angry Young Men;
Bloomsbury Group; English poets; African Americans; American artists;
American Canadians; American women; American writers; Asian Americans;
Cajuns; Cuban Americans; European Americans; Hispanic Americans;Jewish
Americans; Lebanese Americans; Mexican Americans; Native Americans;
Puerto Ricans;White Americans; Asian African American women; Chinese
American women; Hispanic American women; Italian American women;
Mexican American women; The Rich; Yuppies; The Poor
Topical/Theme Searches
Topic searches range as widely as sources written about them range.
For example:
- Goodness; Gossip; English society
Technique Searches
There are numerous techniques that are searchable. Examples are:
- Technique; Abstraction; Amplification; Anacoluthon; Analepsis;
Antirealism; Apologetics; Argumentation; Burlesque; Camp; Characterization;
Chiaroscuro; Contradiction; Contrast; Defamiliarization; Description;
Detail; Diction; Diegesis; Digression; Dissonance; Echo; Emphasis;
Epistolary technique; Equivocation; Eroticism; Esperpento;
Evocation; Figuration; Figurative language; Flashback; Focalization;
Foregrounding; Foreshadowing; Framing; Gestus; Hypertextuality;
Interlacing; Interpolation; Intertextuality; Inversion; Juxtaposition;
Leitmotifs; Localization; Mimesis; Mise en abyme; Montage;
Mood; Musicality; Mythification; Narration; Narrative technique;
Omission; Parallelism; Perspective; Poetic technique; Point of View;
Polyphony; Prolepsis; Realism; Referentiality; Repetition; Ruse;
Satire; Setting; Soliloquy; Style; Suspense; Symbolism; Symmetry;
Tone; Travesty; Unity; Verfremdung; Verisimilitude; Cinematic
technique; Dramatic technique; Structure
Texts
There are terms for close studies of the texts themselves. Examples:
- Text; Textual editing; Textual explication; Textual form; Textual
revision; Textuality; Textualization
Publication Year
You can limit sources retrieved by the year the criticism or commentary
(not the primary source) was published. Do this under "Publication
Date" on the initial search screen (to narrow an existing search,
select "Refine Search"). Use the drop down menu to select
the month and type in the year.
See EBSCO on Truncation
and Proximity Operators for information about using these search
mechanisms in MLA.