Author Archives: Jenny Sasser, Ph.D.

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About Jenny Sasser, Ph.D.

I am a transdisciplinary educational gerontologist, writer, community activist and facilitator. I am former Chair of the Department of Human Sciences and Director of Gerontology at Marylhurst University. I joined the faculty as an adjunct member of the Master of Arts in Interdisciplinary Studies program in 1997 and since that time, I've been involved in designing many on-campus and web-based courses and programs for adult learners, including in Gerontology. As an undergraduate I attended Willamette University, graduating Cum Laude in Psychology and Music; my interdisciplinary graduate studies at University of Oregon and Oregon State University focused on the Human Sciences, with specialization areas in adult development and aging, women’s studies, and critical social theory and alternative research methodologies. My dissertation became part of a book published in 1996 and co-authored with Dr. Janet Lee--Blood Stories: Menarche and the Politics of the Female Body in Contemporary US Society. Over the past twenty (or more!) years I have been involved in inquiry in the areas of creativity in later life; older women's embodiment; sexuality and aging; critical Gerontological theory; transformational adult learning practices; and inter-generational friendships and cross-generational collaborative inquiry. I am co-author, with Dr. Harry R. Moody of Aging: Concepts and Controversies (now in its 10th edition!) and first author, also with Moody, of the recently published Gerontology: The Basics, as well as author/co-author of several book chapters, articles and essays. Currently, I serve as department chair and faculty for the Portland Community College Gerontology Program.

Gero-Punk Provocation: Our research is living, our data is life

Happy Autumn Equinox to you! I hope this message finds you all doing just swell on this liminal day that marks the transition from summer to fall. I don’t know what the weather’s like where you are, but those of … Continue reading

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Gero-Punk Reflections: Someone Is Watching Over Me

An essay from guest Gero-Punk Larry Cross “All the good wasn’t good and all the bad wasn’t bad, and it wasn’t happenstance.” Kerrigan Black, my partner of 16 years, wrote those lyrics to his song, “Someone is Watching Over Me.” … Continue reading

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Gero-Punk Recollections: Part Five–When Rattlesnakes are Blind

Part five in a series of essays by guest Gero-punk Velda Metelmann The Barn and the Cottonwood Tree      Across the shallow spill of the puddle, the lane sloped gently down beside the barn and up a little rise again … Continue reading

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