Norman Stillman
file:Norman Stillman.jpeg|thumb|Norman Stillman, Bar-Ilan University in 2017
Norman Arthur Stillman, also Noam, is a Jewish-American academic, historian, and Orientalist, serving as the emeritus Schusterman-Josey Professor and emeritus Chair of Judaic History at the University of Oklahoma. He specializes in the intersection of Jewish and Islamic culture and history, and in Oriental and Sephardi Jewry, with special interest in the Jewish communities in North Africa. His major publications are The Jews of Arab Lands: a History And Source Book and Sephardi Religious Responses to Modernity. In the last few years, Stillman has been the executive editor of the "Encyclopedia of Jews in the Islamic World", a project that includes over 2000 entries in 5 volumes.
Biography
Stillman studied at the University of Pennsylvania, receiving the B.A. in 1967 and Ph.D. in Oriental Studies in 1970, Shelomo Dov Goitein being his thesis advisor. He was a post-doctoral fellow at the Jewish Theological Seminary of America. He has received numerous academic honors, among them the Phi Beta Kappa, the SUNY Chancellor's Award for Excellence in Teaching and the SUNY-Binghamton award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching. He delivered the Momigliano Lectures for the University of Chicago's Committee on Social Thought and the Sherman Lectures for the Oriental and African Studies">Mizrahi Jews">Oriental and African Studies at the University of London. He was Lady Davis Fellow at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 1994-1995 and visiting fellow at the Moshe Dayan Center for Middle Eastern and African Studies at Tel-Aviv University. He received the Ohio State University Melton Center's Distinguished Humanist award in 2000 and was a visiting scholar at the Institut national des langues et civilisations orientales in Paris in 2001-2002. Stillman also appears in the 2005 film, The Hebrew Project. Stillman is the Chair of the Academic Committee of the Association for the Study of the Middle East and Africa.Stillman was married to the late, Professor of Near Eastern History and Languages, also at the University of Oklahoma, with whom he worked closely. He is the father to two children and the grandfather of five.