Description
English 102Citation Exercises
Throughout this course, you will be assembling a listof sources that you have read or consulted. To practice citation, you will complete citation exercises for allassigned readings.Each citation exercise will contain:MLA-style Works Cited entries for all readings assigned during this period15 quotations drawn from different places in the reading (at least one from each source)MLA-style parenthetical citations for each quotation(do NOT write a signal phrase)Please choose quotations that you find interesting, not just sentences that you pick out at random. You will be looking back at these assignments for inspiration and resources when you write your papers, so do yourself a favor and choose the very best quotes!Works Cited entries should be listed all together at the end of the document, in alphabetical order.To be successful, you must:Choose your quotations from varied places throughout the assigned textChoose the most interesting or usefulquotations Copy the quotations you choose exactly, with no errorsNumber each quotationto make sure that you have 15 totalInclude an MLA-style parenthetical citation(in-text citation)foreach quoteWrite MLA-style Works Cited citations for each reading at the endof the document Alphabetizeyour list of Works Cited entriesCite each selection from the Prison Writinganthology separatelyDouble-check all citations to make sure they are correct and they follow MLA rules
***2.Foucault,Murtagh(2 sources, 7-8 quotes per source)***
Explanation & Answer
Attached.
Surname 1
Name
Professor
Course
Date
Citation Exercises
Murtagh (2016, 1) defines punishment as deliberately inflicting suffering on an offender
or a supposed offender for a legal or moral transgression. Punishment is causing pain or
depriving needs same as that which an offender has caused on others; the agreement is that the
punishment needs moral, political and legal justification. An offender should not be punished in
a way that more pain is inflicted on him or her than what he or she caused to another. Murtagh
(2016,1) says that retributivists try to find how to link a moral wrong with a punishment. They
justify the practice of punishment because wrongdoers get what they deserve. By focusing on the
intrinsic value of the wrong, they argue that the wrongness of a crime deserves a punishment of
equal severity. According to Murtagh (2016, 1), utilitaria...