asr-writing-style
GitHub用于起草或润色美国社会学评论(ASR)稿件,确保符合ASA格式规范、跨子领域可读性,并严格控制在15000字(含参考文献)及200字摘要内。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill asr-writing-style -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "asr-writing-style",
"description": "Use when drafting or polishing an American Sociological Review (ASR) manuscript so it reads for the whole discipline, follows the ASA Style Guide, and fits the limits (Articles <= 15,000 words including text, references, and footnotes; abstract <= 200 words). Tightens prose and format; it does not invent content."
}
Writing Style (asr-writing-style)
An ASR paper must be readable by a sociologist outside its subfield, formatted to the ASA Style Guide, and disciplined to a word cap that includes the reference list. This skill is about reaching the discipline and respecting the format — not generating claims.
When to trigger
- Drafting the introduction, framing the contribution, or final polish
- Over the word cap and needing to cut without losing the argument
- Writing the <= 200-word abstract (150-200 target range; the binding rule is a 200-word ceiling)
- Aligning citations, headings, and format to the ASA Style Guide
Reach the whole discipline
- Front-load the contribution. By the end of the introduction the reader knows the question, the argument, the evidence, and why it matters to sociology broadly.
- Minimize subfield jargon or define it on first use; spell out acronyms; an ethnographer should follow a demographic paper and vice versa.
- Argument-first prose. Lead with claims; use evidence to support them. Make the mechanism and
concept (from
asr-theory-building) explicit. - Signpost with clear section structure.
Format to the ASA Style Guide
- Citations: author-date per the ASA Style Guide (7th ed., 2022); keep one consistent style (manage with Zotero/BibTeX). References count toward the 15,000-word limit.
- Manuscript: double-spaced, Times New Roman 12 pt, ≥1-inch margins; include a word count.
- Masking: no title page in the manuscript; a separate title page carries affiliations, acknowledgments, and contact. You may cite your own work but must not word it to identify yourself ("in our prior study" → "in a prior study").
- Abstract: <= 200 words (150-200 target), with no identifying information.
Fit the word cap (incl. text + references + footnotes; tables/figures excluded)
- Tighten the literature review — engage the debate, not every paper (see
asr-literature-positioning). - References count, so prune redundant citations and over-long reference strings.
- Tighten footnotes — they count.
- Move extended detail to supplementary materials where appropriate; keep the article focused.
Prose moves a general-sociology reader needs
At the ASA flagship the reader of record is a sociologist outside your subfield, so the writing does disciplinary translation a specialty journal does not require.
| Weakness | Cross-subfield reader experiences | Prose fix |
|---|---|---|
| Jargon undefined | stalls on a term of art | define on first use; spell out acronyms |
| Stakes buried | doesn't know why to read on | front-load significance in the intro |
| Evidence-first paragraphs | can't find the claim | lead with the claim, support with evidence |
| Over-long reference strings | length burned, argument thin | prune; references count toward 15,000 |
| Self-citation in identifying voice | masking broken | "in a prior study," not "in our prior study" |
Worked micro-example (illustrative)
A network-study introduction is rewritten to reach the discipline.
Before: "We extend ERGM specifications of tie formation in adolescent friendship networks..."
→ a generalist stops reading
After: "How do everyday social ties reproduce racial segregation? A small set of formation rules
generates large-scale separation..." → stakes first, method second
Abstract: trimmed 224 → 188 words, finding plain, no institution named → in range
Length: pruned 40 redundant citations, recovering ~600 words against the cap incl. references
The contribution leads, the method follows, and the prune is treated as a budget item.
Referee pushback → ASR-specific fix
- "Couldn't tell why this matters until page 12." → Move significance and argument into the first two pages so a generalist commits early.
- "Too much subfield shorthand." → Define each term on first use; replace insider phrasing with plain disciplinary language.
- "Over length." → Tighten literature engagement and prune citation strings; references and footnotes count, tables and figures do not.
Calibration anchors
- Write for the generalist, format for the ASA Style Guide. ASR's dual demand is cross-subfield readability plus author-date conventions and masking discipline.
- References are inside the cap. Unlike many journals, ASR counts references and footnotes toward 15,000 words — budget citations from the first draft.
- Confirm caps against the journal's current submission guidelines if exact limits are decision-relevant; the broad shape is stable.
Anti-patterns
- A subfield-insider intro that never states broad significance
- Burying the contribution mid-paper
- An abstract over the 200-word ceiling or one that hides the finding
- Self-references worded so they break masking
- Treating references as "free" — they count toward 15,000 words
Output format
【Contribution stated by end of intro?】[Y/N]
【Reads past the subfield?】jargon defined / acronyms spelled? [Y/N]
【Abstract】word count (<= 200), non-identifying?
【Word count】Article ≤ 15,000 incl. text + references + footnotes?
【ASA style + masked + separate title page】[Y/N]
【Next】asr-data-and-transparency
Supplementary resources
../../resources/official-source-map.md— word/abstract caps, ASA Style Guide, masking, formatting
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 12:22


