ci-evidence-and-objects
GitHub辅助撰写批判性探究论文,精选并深度解读文本、图像等核心对象以验证论点。指导如何选取具有挑战性的案例、进行细致阅读,并处理图片版权与引用规范,确保论证严谨且符合期刊标准。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill ci-evidence-and-objects -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "ci-evidence-and-objects",
"description": "Use to choose and read the objects a Critical Inquiry (CI) essay analyzes — texts, images, artworks, films, performances, events, or cases. In CI the \"evidence\" is not data but objects read closely through theory; this skill helps select objects that test and earn the intervention and handle images to journal standard. It guides selection and reading; it does not run statistics or build datasets."
}
Evidence & Objects (ci-evidence-and-objects)
In Critical Inquiry there are no datasets — the evidence is objects read closely: literary and philosophical texts, paintings, photographs, films, buildings, performances, archival documents, political or historical cases. This skill helps you pick objects that actually test the intervention, read them so the claim is earned, and prepare images to the journal's standard.
When to trigger
- Choosing which texts/images/cases the essay will read
- An argument that asserts more than its objects can demonstrate
- A reading that is rich but not visibly tied to the claim
- Preparing figures and image permissions for submission
Choose objects that do work
- The object must test the claim. Pick cases that could in principle resist the argument, not only ones that flatter it. A reading earns trust when the object pushes back and the claim survives.
- Few and deep over many and thin. CI prizes close reading; one object read to the hilt beats a catalog of examples skimmed. Let the analysis go far into the particular.
- Right scale of object. Match the object to the claim — a single image for a claim about seeing; a passage for a claim about a concept's grammar; a case for a claim about a practice.
- Interdisciplinary objects welcome. CI essays routinely cross media — a poem and a painting, a film and a treatise — when the juxtaposition earns the conceptual point.
Read so the claim is earned
- Show the work. Walk the reader through the text/image; do not assert what it "obviously" means.
- Quote and describe precisely. Exact language, exact visual detail — the analysis lives here.
- Let the object talk back. Note the friction, ambiguity, or counter-evidence and incorporate it;
honesty about the object strengthens the intervention (see
ci-argument-and-intervention). - Tie every reading to the turn. Each analysis should advance the claim, not display erudition.
Object dossier (one per object, before drafting)
The footnote is CI's only bibliographical record and image rights are the author's problem; settle these per object before drafting:
- Exact edition, translation, or version. The Chicago note cites what you actually read; for translated material, decide whose translation carries the analysis.
- Images: locate a source yielding 300 ppi JPEG/TIFF, identify the rights holder, estimate permission cost now — a reading built on an image you cannot clear is stranded.
- Films / performances: fix the print, cut, or recording analyzed; the frame the claim rests on may not exist in another version.
- The recalcitrant detail: the feature most likely to embarrass the claim, and where the essay meets it.
- The falsifier sentence: "if this object does not show ___, the claim about ___ fails." If nothing could fail, the object is decoration.
Micro-example — illustration vs. test
Illustrating (weak). "The daguerreotype confirms the standard account of the copy: a mechanical reproduction lacking the presence of an original." The sentence survives with any photograph substituted, or none — the object merely nods along.
Testing (CI-shaped). "On that account the daguerreotype should have shed its singularity — yet the creased corner and pencilled date on its verso are exactly what the sitter's descendants travel to touch; either singularity survives reproduction unpredicted, or it was never singularity, and the essay must decide." A material detail forces a choice the concept cannot make alone. (Fictional.)
Images to journal standard
- Supply images as separate files, 300 ppi, JPEG or TIFF — not embedded in the Word file.
- Keep a numbered figure list with captions and full credit lines.
- Secure permissions for in-copyright images yourself, before publication — budget time and money
(see
ci-submissionandci-citation-and-style). - Use figures the argument reads; an image in CI is an object of analysis, not decoration.
Anti-patterns
- Cherry-picking only confirming examples; ignoring the recalcitrant object
- A pile of thin examples instead of one deep reading
- Asserting a text's meaning without showing the reading
- Embedding low-res images or leaving permissions to the last minute
Output format
【Objects】the texts / images / cases the essay reads
【Why these】how each tests (not just illustrates) the claim
【Depth check】close reading, not a catalog? [Y/N]
【Counter-evidence】where the object resists, and how handled
【Images】separate 300 ppi JPEG/TIFF + permissions plan
【Next】ci-theory-and-method
Supplementary resources
../../resources/external_tools.md— archives, text and image sources, image-prep specs../../resources/official-source-map.md— image format / permissions requirements
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 12:49


