Mgr. Martina Reiterová
Education:
Winter semester 2014/2015 – Faculty of Arts, Charles University, Prague Summer semester 2015 – Eötvös Loránd University, Faculty of Humanities, Budapest Academic year 2015/2016 – Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris Master thesis: L'auto-représentation des Bretons dans le discours régionaliste entre la fin du XIXe siecle et la Premiére guerre mondiale, obhájena na EHESS (Paris), školitelé: Marie-Vic Ozouf-Marignier, Gábor Czoch a Eva Hajdinová
Dissertation topic: National and Regional Movements in the so-called Celtic Countries (Brittany, Ireland, Scotland and Wales) in the Late 19th and at the Beginning of the 20th Century and their Relationship to the Celtic Identity, Supervisor: Mgr. Jaroslav Ira, Ph.D.
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Field of Study:
- National and regional movements, collective identity
- Modern history of the so-called Celtic countries
- General and comparative history of the 19th century
- Theory and methodology of historiography
Occupations and internships:
- 04/2017 – present Erasmus+ Coordinator, International Relations Office, Faculty of Arts, Charles University
- 09/2016 – 03/2017 Assistent at the International Relations Office, Faculty of Arts, Charles University
- 02 – 04/2016 Internship at the Embassy of the Czech Republic in Paris and the Permanent Delegation of the Czech Republic to UNESCO
- 2012 – 2016 Assistant archivist in Military Historical Archive, Prague
Conferences and Workshops:
- 13 – 15/09/2017 participation at the conference The 11th Congress of Czech Historians in Olomouc
presentation: Role of Cultural Heritage in the process of Representing a Region: Case of Brittany at the beginning of 20th century
- 12/04/2017 participation at workshop Strategies of Identity: Heritage and DiversityI, held at the Faculty of Arts, Charles University
presentation: A Problematic Heritage? Identification Strategies of Breton Regionalists in the Late 19th and at the Beginning of the 20th Century
Publications:
- REITEROVÁ, Martina: Internationalism in Science: Case of Revue celtique, Obscura 3/5 (2016/2017), p. 39 –44.