Giulia Bogliolo Bruna is an Italian ethno-historian, living in France, specialist of the discovery travels at the Renaissance,[1][2][3] of the imaginary (and the image) of the north and of the Inuit in Frencophone and Anglophone travel literature,[4][5][6][7] and of the Inuit, their culture and traditional art[8][9][10][11][12] A member of the prestigious Paris Centre of Arctic Studies, founded and directed by Jean Malaurie, she sits on the editorial board of Internord, International Review of Arctic Studies and, for two decades, of Thule, Italian review of American Studies .
[13] She participated in the International Congress Arctic Problems, Environment, Society and Heritage, held in Paris, March 8 to 10, 2007, at the National Museum of Natural History (Muséum national d'histoire naturelle) under the honorary chairmanship of Jean Malaurie, which unveiled the International Polar Year celebrations in France.
As a specialist of the discovery travels at the Renaissance, Giulia Bogliolo Bruna investigates the dynamic process of Inuit image evolution from the time of First Encounters to the Years 60.
As a researcher at the Centre of Arctic Studies, she published several scientific books, some of which devoted to great geo-ethnologist and writer Jean Malaurie's personality and thinking[15][16][17] as well as more than 100 papers in the top ranking reviews and journals.
[18] As a specialist of modern literature and poetry (Journée mondiale de la poésie Poesia-2 Ottobre [fr]), she published several poetic harvest and, in Italy, a major essay on Herman Melville.