soctheory-writing-style
GitHub用于撰写或润色社会学理论(ST)期刊稿件,确保文本呈现为针对广泛理论读者的论证而非文献综述。遵循ASA第7版格式规范,严格控制包含所有元素的字数上限(约14,500词),并强制使用命题、机制等理论术语,避免实证主义表述。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill soctheory-writing-style -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "soctheory-writing-style",
"description": "Use when drafting or polishing a Sociological Theory (ST) manuscript so it reads as an argument for a broad theoretical readership, follows the ASA Style Guide, and fits ST's length cap (max ~14,500 words inclusive of footnotes, references, tables, figures, and appendices — verify current). Tightens prose and format; it does not invent content."
}
Writing Style (soctheory-writing-style)
An ST paper must read as a sustained theoretical argument legible to sociologists across traditions, be formatted to the ASA Style Guide (7th edition, June 2022 — verify current), and fit a length cap that includes everything — footnotes, references, tables, figures, and appendices. This skill is about reaching theory readers and respecting the format, not generating claims.
When to trigger
- Drafting the introduction, framing the contribution, or final polish
- Over the length cap and needing to cut without losing the argument
- Aligning citations, headings, and format to the ASA Style Guide
- The prose reads like a literature review instead of an argument
Write as an argument, not a survey
- Open with the theoretical problem, not a definition or a survey. By the end of the introduction the reader knows the tension existing theory cannot resolve, the move you make, and the new way of seeing it provides — not "the concept of X has been studied extensively."
- Lead with claims; reason toward them. Each paragraph advances the argument. The prose is the contribution at a theory journal, so it must read as reasoning, not as reportage.
- Define each concept on first use and use the label consistently. Conceptual slippage is the cardinal ST writing sin; a term must mean the same thing on page 3 and page 30.
- Reach across traditions. A field theorist should be able to follow a pragmatist argument and vice versa; define tradition-specific terms; spell out what is at stake for sociology broadly.
Vocabulary rule (absolute)
Propositions, not hypotheses; mechanisms, not findings; illustrations, not tests. Never write "H1," "supported / not supported," "we estimate," or "our data show that…" — that is ASR/AJS register and reads as wrong-journal to ST editors. A case or example illustrates a concept; it never confirms it.
Format to the ASA Style Guide
- Citations: author-date per the ASA Style Guide; one consistent style (manage with Zotero/BibTeX). References count toward the length cap.
- Manuscript: standard 12-pt font, double-spaced, generous margins; include a word count. (ST guidelines describe roughly 40 manuscript pages — confirm current spec.)
- Masking: separate title page; no author-identifying content in the body. You may cite your own work but must word it neutrally ("a prior study," not "our prior study").
- Abstract: a concise statement of the problem, the theoretical move, and the contribution — with no identifying information (verify the current abstract limit on the author page).
Fit the cap (everything counts)
ST's cap is inclusive of footnotes, references, tables, figures, and appendices (max ~14,500 words — 检索于 2026-06;以官网为准). Budget accordingly:
- Tighten the literature engagement — intervene in the debate, do not catalog it.
- Prune redundant citations and over-long reference strings; references count.
- Tighten footnotes; they count too.
- An exhibit must earn its space against the cap (see
soctheory-conceptual-exhibits).
Referee pushback → ST-specific fix
- "Reads like a literature review." → Re-open with the problem and the move; lead each
paragraph with a claim (
soctheory-argument-development). - "Concept drifts across the paper." → Lock each definition on first use; use the label verbatim.
- "Hypothesis-testing language in a theory paper." → Purge H1/"supported"/"we estimate"; restate as propositions and mechanisms.
- "Over length." → Trim citation strings and footnotes; everything counts toward the cap.
Anti-patterns
- A dictionary/survey opening instead of the theoretical problem
- Evidence-first paragraphs where the claim cannot be found
- Conceptual slippage — a term used in two senses
- Hypothesis-and-data vocabulary in a theory manuscript
- Treating references/footnotes as "free" — they count toward ~14,500 words
- Self-references worded so they break masking
Output format
【Problem stated by end of intro?】[Y/N]
【Reads as argument, not survey?】claims lead; concepts defined on first use [Y/N]
【Vocabulary】propositions/mechanisms only; no H1/"supported"/data-test language [Y/N]
【Length】≤ ~14,500 words incl. footnotes + references + tables + figures + appendices [Y/N]
【ASA style + masked + separate title page】[Y/N]
【Next】soctheory-contribution-framing
Supplementary resources
../../resources/official-source-map.md— length/abstract caps, ASA Style Guide, masking, formatting
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 14:28


