Journal of Social History (journal-of-social-history)
Journal positioning
The Journal of Social History, published by Oxford University Press, is a leading venue
for social history — the history of everyday life, social structures, and lived
experience: class, gender, family, work, sexuality, crime and punishment, childhood,
aging, leisure, and the experience of marginalized and ordinary people across periods
and regions. Its defining expectation is an argument that recovers and explains social
experience with methodological self-consciousness: an explicit account of how the
sources are read to reach people who left few records, and a historiographical stake in
how social history understands its subject. A study of high politics, formal
institutions, or canonical ideas with no attention to lived social experience is a poor
fit, as is a descriptive recovery with no argument or method. This skill is a fit /
venue-selection / re-framing aid. It does not replace the journal's current submission
guidelines. Before submitting, re-check the live Journal of Social History author
instructions and style guide.
When to trigger
- The author names the Journal of Social History for a social-history manuscript and
wants a fit/framing check.
- A study of everyday life or ordinary people needs its method of reading the sources and
its social-history stake made explicit.
- The author is choosing between this journal and a generalist (AHR), political-history,
or area-specialist venue.
- The author needs the journal's methodologically self-conscious social-history bar and
desk-reject heuristics.
Scope & topic fit
- The social history of class, work, and labor, and the structures of inequality in
ordinary lives.
- Gender, sexuality, family, marriage, childhood, and aging as lived social experience.
- Crime, deviance, policing, and punishment read for what they reveal about social order
and the people caught in it.
- Material life, consumption, leisure, the body, emotions, and everyday practice across
periods and regions.
- Histories of marginalized and subaltern groups recovered through creative, critical use
of records not made about them.
- Methodologically reflective social history that engages quantitative, qualitative, or
microhistorical approaches as part of its argument.
Method & evidence bar
- The contribution is an original argument about social experience, not a descriptive
recovery; name what it explains and its social-history stake.
- Primary-source command is deep and critical, with an explicit, self-conscious method for
reading records to reach people who left few of their own, and for using any quantitative,
qualitative, or microhistorical techniques whose logic and limits are made plain.
- Historiographical positioning is explicit: which conversation in social history the
piece enters and how it revises it.
- Interpretation is controlled by evidence; claims about ordinary or marginalized lives are
proportioned to what fragmentary sources can sustain and alert to their bias.
- Engagement with social-history scholarship situates the contribution beyond the immediate
case.
Structure & house style
- Long-form scholarly article with a sustained argument; defer exact word limits and
article types to the live guide.
- Chicago notes-and-bibliography style with full footnotes; archival, quantitative, and
record-series citations follow the journal's form.
- Double-blind review: anonymize the manuscript — self-identifying citations and
acknowledgements — per current policy.
- Prose is argument-led and legible beyond the subfield; non-English sources are quoted and
translated per policy.
- Tables, figures, or images, where used, require permissions and meet the journal's
specifications, and quantitative material is presented clearly.
Official-submission checklist
- Before giving submission-ready advice, read
../../resources/source-basis.md and
../../resources/official-source-map.md; start from the OUP anchors, then cite the
current Journal of Social History page you checked.
- Search the live site for "Journal of Social History submission guidelines" and follow the
current version.
- Re-check article types, word limits, the Chicago footnote form, and the abstract
requirement.
- Confirm anonymization requirements for double-blind review.
- Re-check image/table permissions and specifications, and the translation policy for
non-English sources.
- Re-check competing-interest, funding (if applicable), and AI-use disclosure, and any
open-access terms.
- If the live official instructions conflict with this skill, the official instructions
win.
Pre-submission self-check
Common desk-reject triggers
- A study of high politics, institutions, or canonical ideas with no attention to lived social experience.
- A descriptive recovery of a group or practice with no argument or method.
- Source use with no explicit strategy for reaching people who left few records, no methodological self-consciousness where quantitative or microhistorical techniques are deployed, or claims over-reading thin sources.
- No explicit positioning in social-history scholarship — restating the literature without revising it.
- Wrong venue: a piece pitched to a political-history or single-area community better served elsewhere.
Re-routing decision
- Discipline-wide significance for a generalist readership →
the-american-historical-review.
- Problem-driven social/economic/cultural history with comparative reach →
past-and-present.
- Modern European archival study with broad significance →
the-journal-of-modern-history.
- British or wide-ranging empirical study →
the-english-historical-review.
- Argument about social-history method or explanation itself →
history-and-theory.
Output format
[Fit] High / Medium / Low (one-line reason)
[Target] Journal of Social History
[Field/period/region] <closest social-history topic, period, region>
[Argument] <the argument about social experience in one line>
[Sources/historiography] <does the source method + social-history stake clear the journal's bar?>
[Top risk] <the single most likely reason for rejection>
[Official items to re-check] <word limit / Chicago style / anonymization / image-table permissions / translation>
[Re-route suggestion] <if not a fit, a better-matched venue>