history-and-theory
GitHub用于评估稿件是否符合《History and Theory》期刊定位,聚焦历史哲学、史学理论及方法论。提供选题匹配检查、理论重构建议、范围界定及拒稿预判,辅助作者判断是否适合投稿或需调整框架。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill history-and-theory -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "history-and-theory",
"description": "Use when targeting History and Theory or deciding whether a philosophy-of-history, historiography, or historical-method manuscript fits this venue. Encodes the journal's meta-level theoretical bar, its historiographical and conceptual expectations, house style and double-blind norms, official-submission re-check, and desk-reject heuristics."
}
History and Theory (history-and-theory)
Journal positioning
History and Theory, published for Wesleyan University (Wiley), is the leading venue for the philosophy of history, historical theory, historiography, and the epistemology and method of history. It is a meta-level journal: its object is not the past itself but historical thinking — how historians explain, narrate, periodize, represent, and justify claims about the past, and what concepts and methods underwrite that practice. Its defining expectation is an original theoretical or methodological argument that advances debate about historical knowledge, engaging the relevant theoretical literature with philosophical care. A straightforward archival case study with no theoretical or methodological stake is a misfit here, however accomplished as empirical history. This skill is a fit / venue-selection / re-framing aid. It does not replace the journal's current submission guidelines. Before submitting, re-check the live History and Theory author instructions and style guide.
When to trigger
- The author names History and Theory for a work on philosophy of history, historiography, or historical method and wants a fit/framing check.
- An empirical project contains a genuine theoretical or methodological argument that could be extracted and developed for a meta-level venue.
- The author is choosing between History and Theory and an empirical history journal or a philosophy journal.
- The author needs the journal's theory-level bar and desk-reject heuristics.
Scope & topic fit
- Philosophy of history: historical explanation, causation, contingency, counterfactuals, and the logic of historical inference.
- Theory of historiography: narrative, representation, the rhetoric of historical writing, and the status of historical truth and objectivity.
- Epistemology and method: evidence, testimony, the archive, periodization, scale, and comparison as conceptual problems.
- Critical and reflexive historiography: memory, temporality, the politics of the past, and debates over the discipline's foundations and futures.
- Conceptual histories of the field's key terms and the theoretical commitments embedded in historical practice.
- Engagement with theory from philosophy, social theory, and adjacent fields when it illuminates how history is done and justified.
Method & evidence bar
- The contribution is an original theoretical or methodological argument about historical knowledge; state the thesis and its stake for historical practice clearly.
- The argument is conceptually rigorous: distinctions are drawn precisely, key terms defined, the reasoning followed through, and the meta-level thesis earned by argument rather than merely asserted.
- Historiographical positioning is explicit: which theoretical debate the piece enters and how it advances or revises it.
- Where historical examples appear, they do genuine argumentative work — illustrating or testing the theoretical claim, not standing in for it.
- Engagement with the relevant theoretical literature (in philosophy of history and adjacent theory) is current, fair, and non-padding.
Structure & house style
- Long-form scholarly article sustaining a theoretical argument; defer exact word limits and article types (articles, review essays where offered) to the live guide.
- Chicago notes-and-bibliography style with full footnotes; footnotes carry qualification and secondary dialectic.
- Double-blind review: anonymize the manuscript — self-identifying citations and acknowledgements — per current policy.
- Prose is precise and economical; technical or philosophical apparatus is used only where it earns its keep, and non-English theory is quoted and translated per policy.
- Any historical illustrations or figures, where used, follow the journal's permissions and specification requirements.
Official-submission checklist
- Before giving submission-ready advice, read
../../resources/source-basis.mdand../../resources/official-source-map.md; start from the Wesleyan / Wiley anchors, then cite the current History and Theory page you checked. - Search the live site for "History and Theory submission guidelines" and follow the current version.
- Re-check article types (articles, review essays), word limits, the Chicago footnote form, and the abstract requirement.
- Confirm anonymization requirements for double-blind review.
- Re-check the translation policy for non-English theoretical sources and any image permissions.
- Re-check competing-interest, funding (if applicable), prior-presentation/preprint, and AI-use disclosure, and any open-access terms.
- If the live official instructions conflict with this skill, the official instructions win.
Pre-submission self-check
- There is a clearly stated, original theoretical or methodological thesis about historical knowledge.
- The argument is conceptually rigorous — distinctions drawn, key terms defined, reasoning followed through.
- The theoretical debate the piece enters and how it advances it are named explicitly.
- Any historical examples do argumentative work and do not substitute for the argument.
- Engagement with the theoretical literature is current, fair, and non-padding.
- The manuscript is anonymized and follows Chicago footnotes and any abstract requirement.
Common desk-reject triggers
- A straightforward archival case study with no theoretical or methodological argument.
- A theoretical claim asserted but not argued, terms left undefined and distinctions blurred, or no explicit positioning in the philosophy-of-history / historiography debate addressed.
- Historical illustration that carries the piece in place of a conceptual argument.
- Engagement with theory that is dated, unfair, or padded rather than load-bearing.
- Wrong venue: empirical history better suited to a substantive history journal, or pure philosophy better suited to a philosophy journal.
Re-routing decision
- Empirical study with discipline-wide significance →
the-american-historical-review. - Problem-driven social/economic/cultural history →
past-and-present. - Modern European archival study with broad significance →
the-journal-of-modern-history. - British or wide-ranging empirical study →
the-english-historical-review. - Representation, memory, or cultural-theory emphasis with a literary axis →
representations.
Output format
[Fit] High / Medium / Low (one-line reason)
[Target] History and Theory
[Field/period/region] <theoretical area — e.g. explanation, narrative, method>
[Argument] <the theoretical/methodological thesis in one line>
[Sources/historiography] <does the conceptual rigor + positioning clear the meta-level bar?>
[Top risk] <the single most likely reason for rejection>
[Official items to re-check] <word limit / Chicago style / anonymization / translation / preprint policy>
[Re-route suggestion] <if not a fit, a better-matched venue>
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 12:57


