Less-represented areas of military history - part 2

Last December we conducted an interview with editors who work in areas of military history which are less well represented on the English language Wikipedia. This formed part of the "Article writer's guide" series which details the nuances behind certain categories of Wikipedia articles to help new editors successfully enter these areas. As the interview received a very good response from participants and readers, we thought that we'd ask another group of editors to share their perspectives on working in under-represented topics. As always, if you have a good topic for a future Bugle edition, please add it on our newsletter's main talk page.

Thank you for agreeing to answer some of our questions. Please tell us a little about your preferred subject(s) on Wikipedia...

How did you come to choose the area(s) you specialize in, or what drew you to the types of subjects you write about?

Generally speaking, what should be covered in an article on your preferred subject(s)? How do you structure your articles?

What kinds of sources do you recommend using?

Have you found it easy to obtain online sources? What about free images?

Biases exist in many forms -- how have you dealt with any biases in sources?

How do you deal with with language barriers in both the subject and the sources about it (e.g. a non-English source)?

What are the most common issues you strike when submitting your articles to formal review?

Do you think that the Military history wikiproject's focus is too heavily weighted towards particular topics?'

What suggestions would you make to editors considering working in a lesser-known field of military history?

Are there any other points you'd like to raise that we haven't covered in this interview, or parting advice that you'd like to offer?
About The Bugle
First published in 2006, the Bugle is the monthly newsletter of the English Wikipedia's Military history WikiProject.

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