I am a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Southern Denmark, where I currently run a project in Byzantine history and literature. I can teach the subjects in humanities, history, Latin & Greek (classics), religion, Christianity, and N/T.
As for my education, I have a Ph.D. degree in Medieval Studies from the Central European University, Budapest/Vienna (2015) and another Ph.D. degree i...
I am a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Southern Denmark, where I currently run a project in Byzantine history and literature. I can teach the subjects in humanities, history, Latin & Greek (classics), religion, Christianity, and N/T.
As for my education, I have a Ph.D. degree in Medieval Studies from the Central European University, Budapest/Vienna (2015) and another Ph.D. degree in Religious and Literary History of the Middle Ages from the Department of Philosophy, Classics, History of Art and Ideas of the University of Oslo (2018). I have worked as a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Southern Denmark (Odense, 2020–2023) and the University of Warsaw/Oxford.
I have experience teaching in schools, mainly in secondary education. My previous experience in teaching includes five years of teaching Latin language in secondary education in Serbia. Also, during my graduate studies (2009), I taught Beginner Greek language for a semester to MA and Ph.D. students at the Central European University in Budapest. During the fall semester of 2017, I taught several courses at the University of Oslo that concerned early Christianity, the Bible, medieval mysticism, and more general courses in the history of ideas for BA and MA students. My pedagogical education includes two exams, Psychology and Pedagogy, during my BA studies, which took two semesters each (both these courses value 6 ECTS points). I also completed the Teaching and Learning in Higher Education course at the University of Oslo in 2017. I currently teach a course at SDU, “Medieval Hagiography and Its Manuscript Transmission,” for Ph.D. students within the Marie Sklodowska Curie Doctoral Network “From antiquity to community: rethinking classical heritage through citizen humanities.”