Mgr. Zuzana Kubovčáková, M.A., Ph.D.

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Introduction

My academic journey began in Bratislava, Slovakia, at the Department of Languages and Cultures of East Asia, where I majored in Japanese Language and Intercultural Communication. During my studies, I was awarded a prestigious state scholarship from the Japanese Ministry of Education (Monbukagakushō), which enabled me to spend a year studying at the Ōsaka University of Foreign Studies (Ōsaka gaikokugo daigaku). There, I immersed myself fully in the study of Japanese language, history, and culture. Subsequently, I pursued an M.A. program in Japanese Religions at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, building upon my research on the earliest history of Zen schools in Japan and the interconnection between the Rinzai school and the samurai class.

After completing my M.A. studies in both Bratislava and London, I embarked on a Ph.D. program at the Department for the Study of Religions at Masaryk University in Brno, Czech Republic. In 2012, I successfully defended my dissertation titled "Politization of Kami and Emergence of Narrative Ideology in Ancient Japan: Earliest worship of Japanese deities and their Reflection in the Chronicles."

Continuing my academic pursuits, I participated in the Summer School on Chinese Buddhist manuscripts at the University of Cambridge in 2018 and the Summer School in Classical Chinese at Ca'Foscari University in Venice in collaboration with Princeton University in 2022.

Research

My research interests focus on general Buddhist thought, Japanese Buddhism, and Japanese religious history. Specifically, I explore topics such as Zen Buddhism, early Japanese religious history, Japanese Buddhist art, architecture, iconography, and liturgy. My current research centers on translating and analyzing works of the Japanese Zen master Dōgen (13th century), particularly his Chinese and Sino-Japanese texts.

Other activities

In 2017, I was invited as a Numata Visiting Professor in Buddhist Studies at the Institute for South Asia, Tibet, and Buddhist Studies at the University of Vienna, Austria. I also taught courses on Japanese religions for international students at Nanzan University in Nagoya, Japan, during the Spring Semester of 2018. In 2022, I returned to the University of Vienna as a part-time lecturer to introduce a pilot course on Shintō, the indigenous religion of Japan, and delivered lectures on Dōgen's teachings and the concept of original enlightenment (hongaku 本覚) for Dharma Academy Italy.

Outside academia, I have enriched my understanding through calligraphy seminars under the guidance of Japanese artist and calligrapher Kazuaki Tanahashi, and through retreats and workshops at American Zen centers including Upaya Zen Center in New Mexico, San Francisco Zen Center, Green Gulch, Tassajara Zen Center, and Berkeley Zen Center in California.

I am proud to be a founding member of the Department of Japanese Studies, where I have been teaching since 2008 and served as the department head from 2013 to 2017.

Mgr. Zuzana Kubovčáková, M.A., Ph.D.

Vice-head, Department of Japanese Studies

E‑mail:
My publications


Total number of publications: 115


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My projects

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