Prose is an exception, quotation marks are also used in conversational dialogue in non-fiction work which means, by definition citation is not necessary. Every novel I've ever read, and most essays, and the play my own DS12 just submitted to his teacher today all have quotation marks without a citation, it all depends on WHAT is being written. From the beginning the OP never used a reference so I assumed this wasn't a reference work. This is why it is generally NOT a good idea to pick someone else apart, not only is it alienating but there is a great deal of room for error in interpretation. I keep trying to give you room for a graceful exit but you refuse so now I want to ask you to please, before you disagree further with me, go and look up the actual portion of the MLA you are disagreeing with and THEN come and talk to me. All formats are covered in the area I cited from, really, it's there, I'm not making it up. I have no interest in besting you but I am capable of reading and I tend to cede to the experts who write the manuals.
I don't exactly understand why you are being so accusative...I simply was trying to give the best advice to the OP and her son. I don't think you understand what I am saying. OBVIOUSLY, one doesn't cite a character's voice. HOWEVER, the presence of the triple quotes indicates that the OP's son planned on chopping off the quote after the character's line-- NOT including more text. Therefore, the citation would be needed. You yourself proved this with your "examples." (Not "exceptions.") *** Didn't realize you weren't the one to provide the helpful examples. That was another correct and extremely helpful PP. You also said you addressed "exceptions apply" in your original post-- you did not. Anyway, citing a quote is not an exception. It's the rule. You use another author's words-- you give them credit.
Please don't be patronizing and say that you're trying to "give me a graceful exit." I never said you were
wrong. I simply said, if you are quoting an author, you cite it. When you cite something (except in the case of a block quote, long stanzas of poetry, or the quote ends in an ellipses), the period goes after the parenthetical citation.
As far as "agreeing with the experts," I am a book editor. I fix grammar for a living. I also tutor middle and high schoolers on the side.
*** I don't exactly get what you're saying about prose:
Every novel I've ever read, and most essays, and the play my own DS12 just submitted to his teacher today all have quotation marks without a citation, it all depends on WHAT is being written.
Obviously a novel doesn't cite itself. A novel, however, uses simply
double quotes when a character is speaking (not the
triple, as when one is citing another source). Clearly, the OP's son was writing a paper and CITING something an author from another work said (hence, why the OP was concerned about the quotation marks/punctuation). Plays never use quotation marks, unless a character is referring to something someone else said.
I really don't understand why you're attacking me. I never said you were wrong or that I disagree with MLA (you pulled that one out of nowhere). I support my livelihood agreeing with Chicago and other manuals of style.