From artbull-skills
Helps revise Art Bulletin manuscripts after a decision and write response letters to referees, keeping double-blind anonymity and image/permissions plan on track.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/artbull-skills:artbull-revision-and-responseThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
A revise-and-resubmit at The Art Bulletin is a real opening: promising work that needs more. The
A revise-and-resubmit at The Art Bulletin is a real opening: promising work that needs more. The revision and its response to referees must move every reviewer toward yes while protecting the contribution — and, because review stays double-blind, the revised files must remain anonymized and the image/permissions plan must keep pace with any new figures.
artbull-images-and-permissions).For each referee comment:
> [Quoted referee comment]
Response: [What we did / why we respectfully disagree, on art-historical grounds].
Change: [Section / page / figure number where the revision appears].
Open with a short summary of the main changes for the editor; group by referee; end each entry with the location of every change so the editor can verify quickly.
Not every comment carries equal weight, and some pull against each other. Sort each demand first.
| Comment type | Default response | Watch for (this venue) |
|---|---|---|
| Editor-flagged decisive point | Solve first; lead the cover note with it | The editor's letter is the rubric — it outranks any one referee |
| Reasonable evidentiary ask | Concede; add the source/figure, cite the page | A new figure triggers a fresh permissions clearance |
| Demand that would dilute the thesis | Rebut respectfully on art-historical grounds | Gutting the claim to please a referee weakens it |
Suppose an R&R arrives on an attribution article: Referee A wants the attribution stated boldly as fact, Referee B wants it hedged to "attributed to." The author holds the certainty term where the evidence licenses it and explains the conflict openly: bolder wording would outrun the underdrawing evidence, softer would ignore the inventory link. A referee also asks for a new detail crop, so the author clears its permission and stages the high-resolution file, quoting each comment with its location.
【Editor's decisive points】addressed first? [list]
【Coverage】every referee comment answered? [Y/N]
【Concede vs rebut】each tagged with reason + change location
【Conflicts】reconciled and explained to editor? [Y/N]
【Contribution protected】no dilution of the thesis? [Y/N]
【Anonymity + new-figure permissions】in order? [Y/N]
【Next】resubmit to the editor
../../resources/external_tools.md — image/permissions and manuscript tooling for new figures../../resources/official-source-map.md — double-blind policy and author-permissions responsibilitynpx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin artbull-skillsExplains The Art Bulletin's double-blind peer review process, referee criteria, and decision outcomes to help anticipate review before submission.
Structures the revision of a PMLA essay and the response to readers' reports after a decision. Helps address every reader comment while protecting the argument and maintaining anonymity.
Structures revision and response letters for American Historical Review editorial decisions, addressing multiple expert reports while protecting the manuscript's argument and anonymity.