From jaar-skills
Plans rigorous source work for JAAR religious-studies articles: primary texts, traditions, historical documents, material/visual sources, or ethnographic fieldwork. Guides citation, translation, provenance, and disconfirming evidence.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/jaar-skills:jaar-sources-and-evidenceThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Religious-studies scholarship rests on **primary materials**: scriptures and commentaries, ritual and
Religious-studies scholarship rests on primary materials: scriptures and commentaries, ritual and liturgical texts, historical archives, material and visual culture, or fieldwork. JAAR judges whether your handling of these sources is careful, well-situated, and adequate to the claim. This is humanities evidence — no datasets or replication, but rigor still governs.
jaar-theory-and-method reflexivity).【Primary sources】what they are + why these
【Languages/editions】originals vs translations; contested terms flagged
【Provenance/context】dating, genre, status established?
【Selection/representativeness】justified? atypical cases flagged?
【Fieldwork (if any)】access, consent, positionality handled?
【Counter-evidence】engaged, not omitted?
【Next】jaar-theory-and-method
JAAR articles run on radically different evidence — a Sanskrit manuscript, a colonial archive, a temple relief, a set of interviews — and a referee for the AAR/Oxford University Press flagship will judge each by its own craft standard. Identify your dominant evidence type and meet the column that governs it.
| Evidence type | What a JAAR referee scrutinizes | Easy disqualifier |
|---|---|---|
| Scriptural / commentarial text | Edition, recension, language of access | Translation quoted where wording carries the claim |
| Historical archive | Provenance, dating, the document's genre and bias | A polemical source read as neutral report |
| Material / visual culture | Object description, context of use, permissions | Iconographic claims with no image |
| Ethnographic fieldwork | Access, consent, positionality, fair representation | Generalizing from a few interlocutors |
| Comparative corpus | Why these cases; commensurability | Cherry-picked exemplars that flatter the thesis |
An author argues that "Sufi poetry rejects legalism," quoting Rumi in a popular translation. A JAAR reader will resist on source grounds:
jaar-citation-and-style).Hedged calibration: as a humanities venue JAAR has no datasets, statistics, or replication archive — rigor is sourcing rigor, not reproducibility. Specific permissions practice for reproduced images and any data-availability language for fieldwork-based work should be confirmed against the journal's current submission guidelines, which can change with publisher policy.
../../resources/external_tools.md — primary-source databases and tools for the study of religion../../resources/official-source-map.md — JAAR scope across traditions and methodsnpx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin jaar-skillsArticulates theory and method for Journal of the American Academy of Religion (JAAR) articles. Sharpens methodological self-awareness, reflexivity, and non-confessional framing.
Evaluates manuscript fit for History of Religions journal: checks comparative method, primary-source evidence, philological rigor, and desk-reject heuristics.
Guides source criticism, primary vs. secondary source analysis, archival citation in Chicago notes, and image permissions for AHR manuscripts.