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RUSS 014 The Russian Novel (SC)

Russian 014: The Russian Novel: Revolution, Terror and Resistance (Vergara) Fall 2020 This guide supports the study of the Russian novel from the years following the Bolshevik Revolution, through the Soviet period, and into the post-Cold War era.

MLA Handbook

MLA: In-Text Citations

MLA Format for In-Text Citations

The control of food determines how a person views his or her government (Standage).

"Half the expense of the diet went on grain, 35 per cent on animal products, and the rest on potatoes" (Clarkson 63).

"There would seem therefore to be no doubt that the type of potato plant which reached Western Europe at the end of the sixteenth century must have been much like the types we now know were common in England prior to the latter half of the seventeenth century" (Salaman 618–619).

MLA: Bibliography

Bibliography

Anbinder, Tyler. “From Famine to Five Points: Lord Lansdowne’s Irish Tenants Encounter North America’s

Most Notorious Slum.” The American Historical Review 107.2 (2002): 351–387. JSTOR, doi:10.1086/532290.

Cayton, Andrew R. L. “Insufficient Woe: Sense and Sensibility in Writing Nineteenth-Century History.” 

          Reviews in American History 31.3 (2003): 331–341. Project MUSEdoi:10.1353/rah.2003.0043.

Clarkson, Leslie A. Feast and Famine: Food and Nutrition in Ireland, 1500-1920. Oxford: Oxford

University Press, 2001.

Nally, David. “‘That Coming Storm’: The Irish Poor Law, Colonial Biopolitics, and the Great Famine.”

Annals of the Association of American Geographers 98.3 (2008): 714–741. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/25515149.

Reader, John. Potato: a History of the Propitious Esculent. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2009. 

Salaman, Redcliffe N. The History and Social Influence of the Potato. Cambridge: University Press, 1970.

Standage, Tom. An Edible History of Humanity. 1st U.S. ed. New York: Walker & Co., 2009.