Suzanne L. Marchand is the Boyd Professor of History at Louisiana State University. Her books include German Orientalism in the Age of Empire and Down from Olympus (Princeton).
"""Winner of the Ralph Gomory Prize, Business History Conference"" ""Finalist for the PROSE Award in European History, Association of American Publishers"" ""[A] sweeping economic, social and cultural history of central Europe. . . . unorthodox and engaging.""---Marc Levinson, Wall Street Journal ""A wide-ranging and thorough study. . . . this is a riveting story, well told . . . by Marchand, who illuminates so much in an original and entertaining way.""---Tim Blanning, Literary Review ""As Suzanne Marchand shows in her meticulous new book, porcelain has been integral to German life since its reinvention in Saxony in 1708."" * The Economist * ""As an economic-business history, Marchand's work is a landmark achievement. . . . Porcelain is a monumental achievement in scope and breadth in illuminating porcelain's European beginnings and its increasingly fragile position in the markets of the present.""---Megan Brandow-Faller, Central European History ""Marchand paints a colourful picture of the day-to-day life of porcelain factories.""---Caroline McCaffrey-Howarth, Apollo ""To weave together cultural, economic, and social history so masterfully takes great historiographical experience and skill. All those who are interested in nineteenth-century German intellectual history admire Suzanne Marchand’s books on the reception of classical antiquity and orientalism. Now she has surprised us with something completely new""---Jürgen Osterhammel, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung ""Marchand, a specialist in German history, writes with clarity.""---Norma Clarke, Times Literary Supplement ""The remarkable achievement of Suzanne Marchand’s new book, Porcelain, which focuses especially on Germany, is that she moves beyond the celebrated age of discovery in the eighteenth century...to explore modern manufacture and diffusion across a broader consumer society in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries .... While Meissen lies at the center of Marchand’s book, one of its great strengths is the broader survey of German porcelain manufacturing.""---Larry Wolff, Journal of Modern History ""N/A""---Monika Poettinger, Austrian History Yearbook"