From jaar-skills
Structures a contestable thesis-driven argument for Journal of the American Academy of Religion articles. Use when feedback says draft is too descriptive or lacks a point.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/jaar-skills:jaar-argument-developmentThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
JAAR's own guidance is blunt: an article must **"have a point."** Description, summary, or a tour of a
JAAR's own guidance is blunt: an article must "have a point." Description, summary, or a tour of a tradition will not do — the essay must argue something a competent reader could dispute, and defend it with evidence and method. This skill turns material into a thesis-driven argument.
jaar-scholarly-positioning)? What changes if you are right?【Thesis】one contestable sentence
【Stakes】what changes for the study of religion if true
【Line of reasoning】the steps each section takes
【Strongest objection】and the answer
【Implication】what the conclusion establishes
【Next】jaar-sources-and-evidence
Referees for the flagship AAR/Oxford University Press journal sort theses by how much they ask the study of religion to revise. Push a draft claim up at least one rung before submission; the bottom two rungs are where the "merely descriptive" desk-return begins.
| Rung | What the draft says | How a JAAR reader hears it |
|---|---|---|
| 0 — Topic | "This essay examines mortuary ritual in X" | No claim; a survey |
| 1 — Description-plus | "X ritual is more varied than assumed" | Local; specialist-only |
| 2 — Reinterpretation | "X is better read as boundary-work, not purification" | A contestable reading |
| 3 — Recategorization | "Cases like X show the purity/danger frame mis-sorts a class of rites" | JAAR's target intervention |
Hedged calibration: editors do not publish a rubric of "rungs"; this is a heuristic distilled from JAAR's stated "must have a point" demand and broad-interest mandate — confirm current expectations against the journal's submission guidelines, which shift between editorships.
A scholar drafts "Threshold Offerings in Two Pilgrimage Sites," describing food offerings left at a Marian shrine in Italy and at a Sufi dargah in the Deccan. A colleague flags it as "two thick descriptions and a shrug." Running it through the ladder:
jaar-theory-and-method.../../resources/official-source-map.md — the "have a point" / analysis-over-description requirementnpx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin jaar-skillsPositions a JAAR article as a contribution to the broad study of religion by framing a field-level problem, engaging theory and method literatures, and naming the intervention across traditions.
Builds the conceptual/theoretical argument of a Current Anthropology manuscript into an agenda-setting, all-fields contribution. Use when data are rich but conceptual payoff is thin, or a reviewer said the paper is undertheorized.
Guides framing and fit-checking manuscripts for The Journal of Religion — covers argument bar, method expectations, house style, and desk-reject heuristics.