First-Book Subventions from the Center for Austrian Studies
In 2023, the Center for Austrian Studies established a book subvention award for:
- Tenure-track and non-tenured scholars, who have
- Secured a publishing contract for their first book project, AND
- Whose publisher has demonstrated additional funds are necessary to offset the costs of publishing said book project.
PLEASE NOTE: Authors must work with their publishers to submit application materials, and certain materials must be submitted directly by the publisher in order for applications to be considered.
The maximum amount awarded by the Center for Austrian Studies will be $1500. Higher amounts will be considered on a case-by-case basis. The scholarly significance of the book as well as demonstrated need will be taken into account by the selection committee.
Eligibility & Terms
- A subvention award will only be given to a publisher for an applicant’s first single-authored book, and must predominantly pertain to topics that focus on the Habsburg Empire and/or its successor states (i.e., the modern states of Austria, Czechia, Slovakia, Hungary, Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia-Herzegovina and/or parts of Italy, Poland, Ukraine, Romania and Serbia). Please contact Center for Austrian Studies if you have questions regarding a book’s eligibility.
- Manuscripts must be in English, and make a substantial scholarly contribution to Austrian, Habsburg and/or East/Central European Studies with primary research undertaken in the appropriate languages. (English translations of first books already published in other languages will be considered on a case-by-case basis.)
- Multiple author books are ineligible (NOTE: authors who have already published an edited collection are still eligible for this award)
- The applicant must have a completed manuscript under contract from an established academic, not-for-profit press nearing production stage (i.e., the manuscript has been peer reviewed in full).
- The press must agree to acknowledge the subvention support received the Center for Austrian Studies; possible language for the press or author to include in the front matter of the book: “Publication of this book was made possible, in part, by a subvention grant from the Center for Austrian Studies at the University of Minnesota.”
- The press or author must also provide the Center for Austrian Studies with two (2) copies of the book upon publication—one for the Center’s library, and the other to be used by the editorial teams of the Center’s scholarly publications in order to solicit a book review.
- Within two months of the book’s publication: a narrative account confirming how the subvention was used with an itemized list of expenses must be sent to Meyer Weinshel (Center for Austrian Studies Associate Director) at Center for Austrian Studies.
- The Center for Austrian Studies has the right to limit the number of subventions awarded to a specific press within the past three (3) calendar years; the publishing representative responsible for completing the application will need to disclose if other book projects have received CAS Subvention Prizes in the past.
- Other terms and restrictions apply; please review the application form in its entirety to determine whether the funds being requested are eligible for a subvention.
Application Guidelines
Applications should be submitted as ONE SINGLE PDF to the Center for Austrian Studies at casahy@umn.edu.
A complete application must include:
- Completed and signed application form. NOTE: This application form must be completed by the Press/Publisher representative, NOT the author.
- Signed copy of the eligibility guidelines and adherence to the terms of the award listed above.
- The author’s Curriculum Vitae
- Overview of the book and its scholarly significance (max. 1500 words)
- The manuscript’s full table of contents
- The Introduction or first chapter (with citations)
- A copy of two reader reports (names may be withheld, and the reports may be abridged, provided that the publisher can certify the scholars are from separate institutions from that of the author)
Deadline: Applications are accepted on a rolling basis, and prizes will be awarded in fall and spring of each calendar year.
Please contact casahy@umn.edu with any further questions regarding the subvention award.
2023: Prof. Katya Motyl (Temple University), Embodied Histories: New Womanhood in Vienna, 1894-1934 (University of Chicago Press)
How are funds dispersed for this award?
Any funds awarded to a book project are sent directly to the author's publisher, a representative from which must have submitted an application on the author’s behalf; subvention funds from the Center for Austrian Studies are not cash prizes awarded directly to authors. If you are interested in submitting an eligible book to our biennial CAS Book Prize instead, please refer to the terms of that award.
Does the subvention cover costs associated with translations of my first book into English?
Costs incurred by an academic press to translate books in other languages into English will be considered on a case-by-case basis. Other terms and conditions of the CAS Subvention Award still apply. For example, subvention funds are restricted to books appearing with academic, not-for-profit presses, and are earmarked for pre- and non-tenured scholars completing their first book project.
My book is being published with an academic press overseas. Can my publisher still apply for subvention awards as they deem them necessary?
Subvention awards are restricted to academic, not-for-profit presses in the United States with the appropriate tax designation. The Center is unable to provide funds to non-U.S.-based publishers.
Must the language of the publication be English, in order for the book to be eligible for subvention funds?
Although the Center for Austrian Studies often supports scholarly work conducted in other languages besides English, books must be appearing in English to be eligible for subvention funds. Subventions that offset the costs of translation into English will be considered on a case-by-case basis, taking into account the other terms and restrictions of the funding.