Automated deduction methods should be specified not procedurally, but declaratively, as inference systems which are proved correct regardless of implementation details. Then, different algorithms to implement a given inference system should be specified as strategies to apply the inference rules. The inference rules themselves can be naturally specified as (possibly conditional) rewrite rules. Using a high-performance rewriting language implementation and a strategy language to guide rewriting computations, we can obtain in a modular way implementations of both the inference rules of automated deduction procedures and of algorithms controling their application. This paper presents the design of a strategy language for the Maude rewriting language that supports this modular decomposition: inference systems are specified in system modules, and strategies in strategy modules. We give a set-theoretic semantics for this strategy language, present its different combinators, illustrate...