Book Review MLA Guide to Undergraduate Research in
MLA Guide to Undergraduate Research in Literature. By Elizabeth Brookbank and H. Faye Christenberry. New
York: Modern Language Association of America, 2019. 137
p. $16 (ISBN: 9781603294362).
Though the Modern Language Association (MLA) is most
known for their style guides, the
MLA Guide to Undergraduate Research in Literature is part of a small collection of pedagogi-
cal treatises the MLA offers for literature and composition
instructors, offering entry points to various foundations of
most English coursework.
They state that this guide is meant for undergradu-
ate researchers or instructors, but it would be weak as an
assigned reading for undergraduates. Its best use is for
English teachers hoping for guidance on teaching literary
research papers and especially instructional librarians who
work in library or composition classrooms. Because the book
describes the research process in similar ways to how it is
often imagined in library information literacy discourse—
with notions like brain storming and keywords, changing
research questions, citation management, and conduct-
ing Internet searching—it works well as a foundation for
research instruction curriculum.
Though it contains similar concepts to information lit-
eracy discourse, it differs from something like the ALA’s
popular cookbook series and similar guides,
1
which offer
activity ideas for undergraduate library instruction in gen-
eral, normally reducing humanities to a singular tradition.
The
MLA Guide to Undergraduate Research in Literature dives
deeply into all facets of literary research exclusively, promot-
ing subject-specific databases outside of the MLA’s own MLA
International Bibliography. Importantly, it tackles particular
problems posed in literary research, such as how to research
a piece of literature that has not been written about in schol-
arship or how to conduct advanced literary searches using
logic specific to literary criticism, such as theme. It focuses
less on activities and more on concepts, though it does
include examples and prompts for the classroom.
It is wise to include this book as the foundation of library
instruction for the English classroom, following the chronol-
ogy it offers for literary research and some of its discussions of
things like describing
contextual primary sources . Rather than
basing instruction ideas purely on information literacy guides
coming from library publishers, this book speaks to the
English community’s needs, as written by the English com-
munity itself.—
Elliott Kuecker, Instructional Librarian / Liaison for First-Year Composition, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia Reference 1. K. Calkins and C. Kvenild,
The Embedded Librarian’s Cookboo. (Chicago: American Library Association, 2014); N. Fawley and