March, 2004�
Curriculum Vitae: DIEGO
OLSTEIN
�
PERSONAL INFORMATION ��
Date of Birth: March 24, 1970.
Place of Birth: Bahía Blanca, Argentina.
Marital Status: Married with two children.
E-mail: [email�protected]
ACADEMIC CAREER�
1997-2002: Ph.
D. Department of History, Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Summa cum�Laude.
1993-1996: M.
A. Department of History, Hebrew University of�
Jerusalem. Cum Laude.
1990-1993: B.
A. Department of History and Department of Psychology, Hebrew� University of Jerusalem. Cum Laude.�����������
STUDIES
AND RESEARCH ABROAD�
2003-2004:
Visiting Scholar at the Department of History, Boston University,
Boston.
1998-1999:
Visiting Researcher at the Department of Medieval History, Consejo
Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (Higher Council of�
Scientific Research), Madrid.
1994-1995:
Visiting Student at the Department of Medieval History, Universidad Complutense, Madrid.
�
LIST OF PUBLICATIONS
Olstein, D.
"Being Arabized and Christians in post-conquest (1085) Toledo:
Revisionism Revised". 18 typewrite pages. Forthcoming
Olstein, D. "The Arabic origins of Romance Private Documents". 12
typewrite pages. Forthcoming�
Olstein, D.
"Top-Down/Bottom-Up Tendencies in the Historiography of Medieval
Spain:
The Mozarabs,
a Case Study". 31 typewrite pages. Forthcoming�
Olstein, D.
"World History from Jerusalem". Journal of World History. 12
typewrite pages.Forthcoming�
Olstein, D.
"Globalization and Historical Writing since the "Global Village"".
Comparativ. (In print).�
Olstein,
D. "El Péndulo Mozarabe".
("The Mozarab Pendulum") Anales
Toledanos. 39 (2003) pp. 37-77.�
Olstein,
D. "A Minority under Two Opposing
Majorities: The Morazabs of Medieval Spain". In Volkov, Sh. Being
Different: Minorities, Aliens and Outsiders in History. Jerusalem,
2000, pp. 79-92. (Hebrew)�
Olstein,
D. "Historiografía Mozárabe en su
Contexto: Restauración, Dictadura y Democracia". ("Mozarab
Historiography in its Context: Restoration, Dictatorship and Democracy")
Reflejos. 8 (1999) pp. 91-104.�
Olstein,
D. "Los Fragmentos Hartzianos y el
Medioevo Hispano". (Louis Hartz's Fragments and Medieval Spain) Reflejos.
6 (1997) pp. 71-79.�
PRESENTATIONS�
2004:
International Medieval Congress. University of Leeds. Lecture: "The
Mozarab Era: The Mozarabs from
Toledo in the 12th and 13th�
Centuries".
2004: Annual meeting
of the Society for Spanish and Portuguese Historical Studies.� UCLA.Lecture:� "Being
Arabized and Christians in post-conquest (1085) Toledo:
Revisionism� Revised".
2003: Workshop in
Comparative Globalizations. Institute for Advanced Studies, Hebrew University. Lecture: "Globalization
and Historical Writing since the "Global Village"".
2002:
Multidisciplinary Seminar on Religious Conversion. Hebrew
University.Lecture: "The Islamisation of Al-Andalus".
2001: Department of
History. Methodological Seminar. Hebrew University.Lecture: "Historiography, Sources and History".
2000: Department of
Islamic and Middle East Studies. Departmental Seminar. Hebrew� University Lecture: "The Mozarab Minority".
1999: Department of�
Medieval History. Departmental Seminars. CSIC (Higher Council of
Scientific Research), Madrid.
1998: Department of�
Spanish and Latin American Studies. Departmental Seminar. Hebrew
University Lecture: "Minorities of Medieval Spain".
1997: Annual Congress
of the Israeli Historical Society. Lecture: "A Minority under� Opposed Rulers: The Mozarabs".
�
TEACHING EXPERIENCE
�
2004-����������
: Lecturer, Hebrew University of�
Jerusalem.
�
1996-2003:
Teaching Assistant and Ph. D. Instructor. Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
������������������
Courses taught:�
�����������������
��Introduction to World History
�������������������
Introduction to History
�������������������
History of World Historiography
�������������������
Conquerors and Conquested in Medieval
Iberia
�������������������
Medieval Spain: Conflict and Encounter
�������������������
The Struggle for Iberia: al-Andalus vs. the
Christian Kingdoms
�������������������
Reconquista, Military Enterprise and
Social Consolidation
�������������������
Medieval Spain: A Feudal Society?
�������������������
Society Organized for War or the Encounter
of Three Cultures?
�
HONORS,
AWARDS AND FELLOWSHIPS
�
2003-2004:
Yad haNadiv Fellowship.
2003-2004:
Fulbright Fellowship.
2002-2003:
Bronfman Prize for the best dissertation in the Faculty of Humanities,
Hebrew University.
2000-2001:
Meyer Prize for Outstanding Ph. D. Student of Medieval History,
Department of�History,
Hebrew University.
1998-1999: Fellowship
of Universidad Complutense for Foreign Students.
1996-1998: Gutwirt
Fellowship for Outstanding M. A. Students.
1995-1999: Fellowship
for Research Students. Faculty of Humanities.
1994-1995: Fellowship
of Universidad Complutense for Foreign Students.
1993:��������� Talmon Prize
for Outstanding� B.A. Graduate, Department of History, Hebrew
University.
1992-1994: Dean List
of Outstanding Students. Faculty of Humanities.
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