ahr-citation-and-style

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Use when formatting citations and notes for an American Historical Review (AHR) manuscript. The AHR follows the Chicago Manual of Style with all references in footnotes/endnotes — no bibliography or works-cited list and no in-text parenthetical citation. Gets the note apparatus right; it does not write the prose or argument.

brycewang-stanford By brycewang-stanford schedule Updated 6/10/2026

name: ahr-citation-and-style description: Use when formatting citations and notes for an American Historical Review (AHR) manuscript. The AHR follows the Chicago Manual of Style with all references in footnotes/endnotes — no bibliography or works-cited list and no in-text parenthetical citation. Gets the note apparatus right; it does not write the prose or argument.

Citation & Chicago Style (ahr-citation-and-style)

The AHR uses Chicago Manual of Style notes: every citation lives in a footnote or endnote, there is no separate bibliography / works-cited list, and there are no in-text parenthetical citations. The note apparatus is substantial — a guideline of roughly 2:1 text-to-notes at initial submission. This skill gets the notes right (verify the current CMOS edition and any AHR house departures on the live guides).

When to trigger

  • Building or cleaning up the footnotes/endnotes
  • Citing archival/manuscript sources, books, articles, or digitized material
  • Converting a bibliography-and-author-date draft to Chicago notes
  • A reviewer or editor flagged citation form or note density

Chicago-notes essentials

  1. All citation in the notes. No bibliography page, no works cited, no (Author year) in the text.
  2. Full first citation, shortened thereafter. First note gives the full reference; later notes use author last name + short title + page. Follow the current CMOS rules for ibid. / shortened forms (confirm the AHR house preference).
  3. Books: Author, Title (Place: Publisher, Year), page.
  4. Articles: Author, "Title," Journal volume, no. issue (Year): page.
  5. Archival / manuscript sources: document description and date, collection, box/folder, archive and location. Be specific enough that another scholar could retrieve it.
  6. Digitized sources: cite the original, then the database / stable URL and date consulted.
  7. Translations & foreign-language titles: follow CMOS conventions; provide translations where needed and note them.

Note density (the AHR norm)

  • Notes carry the evidentiary apparatus and qualifications, side-evidence, and historiographical asides that would clog the text — but they are not a dumping ground for undigested material.
  • Target roughly 2:1 text-to-notes at submission; references typically grow during revision. Concretely, a typical 8,000-word article (the AHR target length, not counting notes) carries about 4,500–5,500 words of notes. Confirm current figures on the live Author Guidelines.

Anti-patterns

  • A bibliography or works-cited list (the AHR does not use one)
  • In-text (Author year) parenthetical citations
  • Vague archival citations with no collection/box/folder
  • Inconsistent shortened forms; mismatched ibid. usage
  • Notes stuffed with material that belongs in the text or cut entirely

Note-form decision table

The American Historical Association's flagship uses Chicago notes for every source type, but the exact form varies by what you are citing. This table routes the common cases; for anything not listed, follow the current edition of the Chicago Manual of Style and confirm any AHR house departure against the journal's current submission guidelines.

Source type First-note shape (full) Later notes (short)
Monograph Author, Title (Place: Publisher, Year), page Author, Short Title, page
Journal article Author, "Title," Journal vol, no. (Year): page Author, "Short Title," page
Edited-volume chapter Author, "Chapter," in Title, ed. Name (Place: Publisher, Year), page Author, "Short Chapter," page
Manuscript / archival Document, date, Collection, box/folder, Repository, City Document, Collection, box/folder
Digitized primary source Original citation; Database (URL), accessed date Original short form, Database
Foreign-language work Original title; supply a translation where the wording carries the argument short title in the original

Worked example: cleaning one archival note

A draft note reads: "National Archives, war records." A reviewer for the AHR — who expects another scholar to be able to retrieve the document — will flag it. The repaired first note specifies the document, its date, the named collection, the box and folder, the repository, and the city: "Quartermaster's return, 14 March 1863, Records of the Office of the Quartermaster General, RG 92, box 41, folder 3, National Archives, Washington, DC." A later citation of the same series shortens to "Quartermaster's return, RG 92, box 41." No bibliography entry is created; the note carries the full apparatus, and a related qualification about the return's incompleteness rides in the same footnote rather than interrupting the prose.

Referee and copyedit pushback, and the fix

Comment you will see The venue-specific fix
"Add a works-cited list / bibliography" (rare, but from non-history readers) Reaffirm AHR house form: all references live in notes; there is no bibliography
"Archival citations are unretrievable" Supply collection, series, box/folder, repository, and city for each
"Shortened forms are inconsistent" Standardize author + short title + page; align ibid. usage to the current CMOS rule
"Notes are doing the article's arguing" Move load-bearing argument into the text; keep the note for evidence and qualification

Calibration anchors

  • Target roughly 2:1 text-to-notes at submission; the note apparatus is one of the AHR's distinguishing features and typically grows during revision (confirm against the journal's current submission guidelines). As a concrete anchor, a typical 8,000-word article carries about 4,500–5,500 words of notes.
  • Notes carry side-evidence, provenance, and historiographic asides — not undigested material dumped to pad the apparatus.
  • All citation is in footnotes or endnotes; there is no in-text parenthetical and no separate reference list, which differs sharply from social-science author-date venues.

Output format

【Style】Chicago notes — no bibliography, no in-text parenthetical? [Y/N]
【First vs. short】full first citation, shortened thereafter? [Y/N]
【Archival form】collection + box/folder + archive specified? [Y/N]
【Digitized】original + database/URL + date consulted? [Y/N]
【Note density】~2:1 text-to-notes at submission?
【Next】ahr-review-process

Supplementary resources

Install via CLI
npx skills add https://github.com/brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill ahr-citation-and-style
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