Sophie Basch is a professor of French literature at the Faculty of Letters at Sorbonne University, a member of the Institut Universitaire de France, a member of the Academia Europaea, and a member of the Royal Academy of French Language and Literature of Belgium. Her research on literary and artistic Orientalism and fin de siècle culture places her at the meeting point between the history of literature and the history of art. Her latest book, Le Japonisme, un art français (2023), was awarded the Paul-Marmottan Academy of Fine Arts Prize.
Sophie Basch is a professor of French literature at the Faculty of Letters at Sorbonne University, a member of the Institut Universitaire de France, a member of the Academia Europaea, and a member of the Royal Academy of French Language and Literature of Belgium. Her research on literary and artistic Orientalism and fin de siècle culture places her at the meeting point between the history of literature and the history of art. Her latest book, Le Japonisme, un art français (2023), was awarded the Paul-Marmottan Academy of Fine Arts Prize.
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Çanakkale, a city near Troy in the Dardanelles region, became known as early as the 18th century for its ceramics, which were exported throughout the East. Cultural archaeology is the subject of this comparative study that embraces many disciplines to help us understand the reasons that have shaped this heritage’s appropriation, reception, and triumphant recognition.