I am a literary scholar specializing in Central European literature, memory studies, and the representation of trauma in Czech and German texts. My research explores how orphanhood functions as a metaphor for historical displacement, political rupture, and the transmission of war memories across generations.
I recently completed my doctoral studies at Sorbonne University in Paris, where I worked under the supervision of Clara Royer. My dissertation, "Strangers in a Strange Land: The Returns of Orphans in German and Czech Literature of the 2000's," examines contemporary novels by authors such as Jáchym Topol, Radka Denemarková, Bianca Bellová, and W.G. Sebald.
Previously, I held a PhD fellowship at CEFRES (French Research Center in Humanities and Social Sciences) in Prague.