Cvrricvlvm Vitæ
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CVRRICVLVM VITÆ Surname: MARINOV Given Names: Tchavdar Ivaylov Date and Place of Birth: October 24, 1974, Shumen, Bulgaria Mailing Address: Ecole Française d’Athènes, Didotou 6, 10680 Athens, Greece Telephone: ++ 30 69 84 96 74 60 E-mail: [email protected] Current Position: Member of the French School at Athens (Ecole Française d’Athènes); Previous Positions: Lecturer at the Department of sociology, Sofia University St Kliment Ohridski, and at the Department of political studies, New Bulgarian University; Courses and Seminars Taught: • 2008-2009 (first semester) – 2009-2010 (first semester): “Nations and Nationalisms” (with Evgenia Ivanova, in French, Department of political studies, New Bulgarian University); • 2008-2009 (second semester): “Introduction to the Contemporary Debates in Histori- ography” (Department of sociology, Sofia University St Kliment Ohridski); • 2005-2006 (second semester) – 2009-2010 (second semester): “Historical Sociology” (with Liliana Deyanova, Department of sociology, Sofia University St Kliment Ohrid- ski); Educational Background: • 2006: Ph.D. in History and Civilizations from the Ecole des hautes études en sciences sociales – Paris, in co-tutelle with the Sofia University. Ph. D. thesis subject: The Im- passe of the Past. The Construction of Macedonian National Identity and the Political- Historiographic Conflict Between Bulgaria and Macedonia; • 2006: Ph.D. in philosophy from the Sofia University St Kliment Ohridski. Ph. D. the- sis subject: The Concept of Lifeworld Between Husserl’s Phenomenology and Haber- mas’ Theory of Communicational Action; • 2000-2006: Ph.D. candidate in History and Civilizations at the Ecole des hautes études en sciences sociales – Paris and in Philosophy at the Sofia University St Kliment Oh- ridski; • 2000: MA (Diplôme d’études approfondies – DEA) from the Ecole des hautes études en sciences sociales – Paris; • 1999-2000: MA (DEA) candidate, Ecole des hautes études en sciences sociales – Paris; • 1999: MA from the Sofia University St Kliment Ohridski; • 1993-1999: Student in sociology and in philosophy, Sofia University St Kliment Oh- ridski; • 1993: Diploma of the National School for Ancient Languages and Civilizations St Constantine-Cyril the Philosopher, Sofia; Academic and Other Public Activities: • Since 2009: Participant in the Project Entangled Balkans. Balkan Histories: Shared, Connected, Entangled financed by the European Research Council; • 2009: Participant in the Project Negotiating Modernity financed by the European Re- search Council; • 2008: Participant in Building Modernity in the Balkans, conference at the New Europe College, Bucharest, Romania; • 2005-2008: Coordinator of the SCOPES Project of the University of Fribourg, Swit- zerland, and of the Center for Advanced Study-Sofia, Bulgaria; organizer and partici- pant in conferences and in teaching exchanges in the framework of the project; • 2007: Participant in Ouverture des archives et écriture de l’histoire dans les sociétés post-communistes, conference organized by the University of Paris X Nanterre and the BDIC, Paris, France; • 2007: Participant in Nationalism and Transnationalism in Post-Ottoman Southeast Europe, conference organized by the Oxford University Balkan Society in Oxford, the United Kingdom; • 2007: Participant in Macedonia at the Crossroads, conference organized by the Center for East European and Russian/Eurasian Studies at the University of Chicago, Chi- cago, USA; • 2006: Speaker at the Journées macédoniennes organized by the Institute for Oriental Languages and Civilizations (INALCO) in Paris; • 2005: Participant in Nordic Identities and Modernities (1800-1940), workshop organ- ized by the Swedish Center for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences in Uppsala, Sweden; • 2004: Participant in Trajectoires communes, trajectoires singulières en Europe (post- )socialiste, doctoral and post-doctoral workshop organized by the Centre Marc Bloch, Berlin, Germany; • 2004: Participant in the Second NEXUS International Conference The Balkans and Globalization, organized by the Center for Advanced Study-Sofia and the Center for Policy Studies (Central European University) in Budapest, Hungary; • 2004: Participant in Nationalism, Society and Culture in Post-Ottoman Southeast Europe, workshop organized by the Oxford University Balkan Society, Oxford, the United Kingdom; • 2003: Participant in the Summer University for political philosophy Vie et pouvoir in Nice, France, organized by the University Lille III and the University Sophia- Antipolis, Nice; • 2003: Speaker at History and Historical Sociology of Socialism, workshop in Plovdiv, Bulgaria, organized by the French non-governmental organization Transeuropéennes – Paris and the Institute for Critical Social Research - Sofia; • 2002: Participant in Nation-State, Nationalism and Globalization, workshop in Paris, France, organized by Transeuropéennes – Paris; • 2002: Participant in the Summer University for political philosophy Droits de l’homme et Civilisations in Dubrovnik, Croatia, organized by the University Lille 3 and the Inter-University Center, Dubrovnik; • 2002: Speaker at Religion, Identity and Politics, Summer University in Ohrid, Mace- donia, organized by Transeuropéennes – Paris and the Macedonian NGO EuroBalkan – Skopje; • 2001: Speaker at History, Historiography and Politics, Summer University in Cetinje, Montenegro, organized by Transeuropéennes – Paris, EuroBalkan and the Open Soci- ety Institute – Skopje; • 1998: Participant in the Congress of the European Students in Liège, Belgium, organ- ized by the University of Liège; • 1998: Participant in Policies of Language in Multi-Cultural Societies, workshop in Ohrid, Macedonia, organized by Transeuropéennes – Paris and the Open Society Insti- tute; • 1995: Participant in Perspectives of Neighborhood in South-East Europe, Summer University in Rennes, France, organized by Transeuropéennes - Paris, the Open Soci- ety Institute and the Council of Europe; Fellowships and scholarships: • 2007-2008: Fellowship at the New Europe College, Bucharest, Romania, in the framework of the Europa Program; • 2004-2005: Fellowship at the Center for Advanced Study-Sofia, Bulgaria, and at Col- legium Budapest, Hungary, in the framework of the collective project ‘We, the Peo- ple’: Visions of National Peculiarity and Political Modernities in the ‘Europe of Small Nations’; • 2004: Six months scholarship from the Institute for Human and Social Sciences (Mai- son des sciences de l’Homme et de la Société) – Sofia; • 2002-2004: Supplementary Grant from the Open Society Institute – New York; • 2003: Fellowship at the Center for Advanced Study-Sofia, Bulgaria, NEXUS program; • 2002-2003: Fellowship at the Institute for Research on Contemporary Societies (IRESCO) – Centre de sociologie européenne in Paris, France; • 2002-2003: Five months scholarship Marie Curie from the European Commission; • 1999-2000: Scholarship of the French Government; Languages (spoken): English, French, Romanian, Modern Greek, Russian, Serbian/Bosnian/ Croatian, Macedonian, Bulgarian; Languages (read): German, Classical Greek, Latin, Old Slavonic and other Slavic and Ro- mance languages; Research Interests in: Theories of citizenship, nationalism and ethnicity; Nation-building processes in the Balkans; Politics of language and politics of cultural heritage in the Balkans; Architecture and nationalism; Political usages of Antiquity in the Balkans; Publications: • The Macedonian Question from 1944 to Nowadays. Communism and Nationalism in the Balkans, Paris: L’Harmattan, 2010 (in French); • “‘Whose is this House?’ The Invention of Bulgarian National Architecture” in Stefan Detchev (ed.), In Search of the Bulgarian-ness: Networks of National Intimacy (19th- 21st Century), Sofia: Institute for the Study of Arts, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, 2010 (in Bulgarian); • “Anticommunist, but Macedonian: Politics of Memory in the Republic of Macedonia”, Tokovi istorije, Belgrade, 2009, 1-2; • “The Aegeans in the Bulgarian identity politics” in The Mobile Balkans. Researches of the NEXUS Project (2000-2003), Sofia: Prosveta, 2009 (in Bulgarian); • “From the ‘Greek Town’ to the Bulgarian Museum: The Invention of National Heri- tage in Melnik”, Revue des Etudes Sud-Est Européennes, XLVII, 1–4, Bucharest, 2009 (in French); • “From “Internationalism” to Nationalism: The Policy of Communist Regime on the Macedonian Question and towards the Ethnic and Religious Minorities” in History of the People’s Republic of Bulgaria. The Regime and the Society, Sofia: Ciela, 2009 (in Bulgarian); • “‘We, the Macedonians’: The Paths of Macedonian Supra-Nationalism (1878-1912)” in We, the People. Politics of National Peculiarity in Southeastern Europe, Budapest: CEU Press, 2009; • “‘Farewell Tito, Hello Europe’: The Republic of Macedonia Facing the Dilemmas of Communist Past and European Future”, L’Europe en formation: “The Western Balkans between Europeanization and Nation-Building”, Nice: Centre International de Forma- tion Européenne, 2008 (in French); • “Multiculturalism on the Balkans: Is It Necessary?”, Identiteti / Identities, Skopje, 2007; • “‘What is a Macedonian Revival?’ On the Macedonian Historiographic Concept of National Revival” in The Balkan 19th Century: Other Readings, Sofia: Center for Ad- vanced Study / Riva, 2007 (in Bulgarian); • “Habermas’ Theory of Lifeworld in Front of the Challenges of Post-National Setting”, Sociologicheski Problemi, Sofia, 2005 (in Bulgarian); • “The Bulgarian National Revival in Macedonia and the Sources of Modern