From artbull-skills
Situates an Art Bulletin article in the historiography and scholarly literature of art history, mapping prior interpretations and methodological debates to stake out a new contribution.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/artbull-skills:artbull-scholarly-positioningThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
An Art Bulletin article must show it knows the **historiography** — how this material (and questions
An Art Bulletin article must show it knows the historiography — how this material (and questions like it) have been interpreted before — and then stake out what is new. The journal's readers are art historians across periods and methods; the literature you engage signals where your contribution sits and why it matters.
artbull-submission).Referees for the College Art Association's quarterly are art historians across periods and methods, so they read positioning for engagement with the field's debates, not just the file on one object.
| Positioning element | Reads as strong | Reads as weak | The fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Historiographic line | Names the foundational accounts and the reading you revise | "Little has been written" | Trace how the problem has been read, then mark your revision |
| Field engagement | Cites the broader methodological and thematic conversation | Only the monographs on your single work | Reach past the file to the debates a generalist expects |
| Anonymized credit | Self-citation neutralized | "As I argued in…" reveals the author | Cite your own prior work in the third person |
Suppose an article reinterprets the program of a famous altarpiece long explained by a single canonical iconographic study. Calling the object "neglected" is plainly false for a canonical work and a flag to any referee. Instead the author traces the historiographic line: the foundational reading established the saints' identities; a later social-history-of-art turn re-read the program through confraternity politics; a recent material study reconstructed the frame. The gap is then precise — none of these explains an anomalous gesture the new reading argues encodes a liturgical function — and the author engages the field by connecting that gesture to broader debates on image and rite. Because review is double-blind, the author's earlier note is cited in the third person.
【Historiographic line】how this has been read → the reading you revise
【Field debates engaged】the broader conversations, not just the single-object literature
【Gap】what prior interpretation misses / gets wrong
【Method】your interpretive framework, stated
【Anonymity】self-citation neutralized? [Y/N]
【Next】artbull-argument-development
../../resources/external_tools.md — reference managers and Chicago notes tooling../../resources/official-source-map.md — scope and double-blind policynpx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin artbull-skillsEvaluates manuscript fit for Art History (the Association for Art History journal) and reframes theoretically engaged art-history submissions to meet its critical/methodological bar.
Evaluates whether an art-history project fits The Art Bulletin's scope and how to frame its contribution for a generalist audience.
Positions an AHR manuscript as an historiographical intervention by naming the debate, stating what the evidence revises, and engaging both specialists and generalists.