Series editors

Jonathan Singerton, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Nicole Phelps, University of Vermont
Julia Secklehner, Masaryk University

Geographical Scope
Global
Chronological Scope
From the eighteenth century to the present-day
Editorial Board

Siegfried Beer, University of Graz
Günter Bischof, University of New Orleans
Michael Burri, Haverford College
Gary B. Cohen, University of Minnesota
Reinhard Heinisch, University of Salzburg
Pieter M. Judson, European University Institute
Fatima Naqvi, Yale University
Dominique K. Reill, University of Alberta

Organisation
Botstiber Institute for Austrian-American Studies
Serie

Transatlantic Perspectives on Central Europe: The Botstiber Institute Series in Austrian-American Studies

De onderstaande tekst is niet beschikbaar in het Nederlands en wordt in het Engels weergegeven.

This new series, in collaboration with the Botstiber Institute for Austrian-American Studies, is devoted to the study of the historical relationship between the United States and Austria, broadly conceived to include the Habsburg Monarchy and its successor states from the early modern period to the present day. The series brings together scholarship that treats historical Austria and the United States not as isolated national units, but as historically entangled spaces connected through migration, diplomacy, commerce, religion, science, culture, and imperial governance. The scope of the series is intentionally transnational and multi-scalar. While Austria and the United States form the core poles of analysis, volumes may range across Central and East-Central Europe (the Habsburg lands and successor states), the Atlantic world, as well as other trans imperial and global settings in which Austrian and American actors intersected. For these reasons, the anticipated series stretches from the eighteenth century to the present-day.

The Botstiber Institute for Austrian-American Studies was founded in 2008 as a program of The Dietrich W. Botstiber Foundation to “promote an understanding of the historic relationship between the United States and Austria.” The Institute accomplishes this goal through offering annual fellowships, providing grants for scholarly research, and sponsoring lectures and conferences on Austrian-American studies.