Ana was born and raised in Belgrade, where she completed bachelor’s and master’s degrees in English language and literature. She holds a master’s degree in English literature from the University of Belgrade on the Prophetic Writings of William Blake. She also holds Cambridge CELTA certificate and Delta diploma in foreign language teaching methodology, both obtained in the UK. Since graduating from her master’s studies in 2011, she has been teaching both Serbian to foreigners and English as a foreign language. Her professional interests include language teaching methodology, pragmatics of native and foreign language use, comparative literature, and language in film and theatre. 

Dr. Orli Fridman holds a PhD in conflict analysis and resolution from the Carter School for Peace and Conflict Resolution at George Mason University. Her interdisciplinary research focuses on peace studies and memory studies with interest in comparative conflict studies. She writes extensively about memory politics and memory activism in Serbia and in the successor states of the former Yugoslavia. In her writing and teaching, she brings comparative knowledge, experience and expertise from the Balkans and the Middle East (with focus on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict).

Dr. Fridman has been involved in political education for more than 20 years. She was trained as a facilitator for groups in conflict, and facilitated group encounters for participants from Israel/Palestine, Cyprus, and the successor states of the former Yugoslavia. She teaches in the Politics Department at the Belgrade-based Faculty of Media and Communications (FMK), where she heads the Center for Comparative Conflict Studies (CFCCS).

See Dr. Fridman’s full list of publications

Courses Taught
  • Peace and Conflict Studies in the Balkans
  • Research Methods and Ethics
  • Practitioner Inquiry
  • Memory and Conflict: Remembering and Forgetting in Divided Societies
  • Reflective Practice
  • Professional Development
Select Publications

Fridman, O. and Gensburger, S. Eds. (2023). The Covid-19 Pandemic: A New Memory Era? Remembrance, Commemoration, and Archiving in Crisis. Palgrave Macmillan Memory Studies. https://link.springer.com/book/9783031345968

Fridman, O. (2022). Memory Activism and Digital Practices after Conflict: Unwanted Memories. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press

Fridman, O. (2022). #Memoryactivism and Online Commemorations. In Y. Gutman and J. Wüstenberg (Eds.). Routledge Handbook of Memory Activism (in press).

Fridman, O. and Gensburger, S. (2022). Unlocked Memory: Did the Covid Pandemic Change Commemorations? in Y. Gutman and J. Wüstenberg (Eds.). Routledge Handbook of Memory Activism. (in press). 

Fridman, O. and Ristić, K. (2020). Online Transnational Memory Activism and Commemoration: The Case of the White Armband Day. In J. Wüstenberg and A. Sierp (Eds.) Agency in Transnational Memory Politics (pp. 68-91). New York: Berghahn Book.

Fridman, O. (2020). Peace formation from below: The “mirëdita, dobardan!” festival as an alternative to everyday nationalism. Nations and Nationalism, 26, 447-460.

Fridman, O. (2020). Conflict, Memory, and Memory Activism: Dealing with Difficult Pasts. In O. Richmond and G. Visoka (Eds.). The Palgrave Encyclopedia of Peace and Conflict Studies. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-11795-5_38-1

Fridman, O. (2018). Too Young to Remember Determined Not to Forget”: Memory Activists Engaging with Returning ICTY Convicts. International Criminal Justice Review 28(4).

Select Popular Work

Featured on Realms of Memory podcast episode 21: https://realmsofmemory.com/podcast/episode-21-memory-activism-in-serbia-remembering-the-wars-of-the-1990s/

New Books Network October 19, 2022. Podcast with Orli Fridman about her book Memory Activism and Digital Practices After Conflict: Unwanted Memories

Glisic, Iva. (Host). (2022). New Books in Eastern European Studies [Audio podcast]. New Books Network. https://newbooksnetwork.com/memory-activism-and-digital-practices-after-conflict

Fridman, O. (2019). “Hashtag Memory Activism as a Mnemonic Practice: Online Memory Activism and Commemoration,” Observing Memories: Magazine of the European Observatory on Memories.

Fridman, O. (2016). “Mirëdita Dobar Dan Festival in Belgrade: We Stuck our Foot in the Open Door,” The Balkan in Europe Policy Advisory Group (BiEPAG) Blog, June 2.

Fridman, O. (2015). “Remembering the Wars of the Balkans: Belgraders helping Refugees from the Middle East,” Local Talk/Siha Mekomit, September 9. [Hebrew]

Fridman, O. (2015). Commemorating the 20th anniversary of the Srebrenica Genocide: Memory Activism in Serbia” Haaretz, July 11. [Hebrew]

Fridman, O. (2015). “How Belgraders Remember the NATO Bombings,” Balkan Insight, March 30.

Select Presentations

Fridman, O. (July 1, 2022). Keynote lecture at the annual conference Witnessing, Memory, and Crisis, at the Amsterdam School for Heritage, Memory and Material Culture

Fridman, O. (July 5-9, 2021). Remembering Online: Alternative Commemorative Events in times of Corona [panel Convenor ‘Memory and Commemorations in Times of Corona’]. Memory Studies Association (MSA), Warsaw/online. https://msaconferencewarsaw.dryfta.com/

Current Research Interests

Memory and commemorations in times of Covid-19

Alternative commemorative events in a comparative perspective

Alternative Ceremonies as a Political Action: the case of the Joint Israeli-Palestinian Memory Day Ceremony & the Joint Nakba Day Ceremony