Vanessa Sasson is a professor of Religious Studies in the Liberal Arts Department of Marianopolis College where she has been teaching since 1999. She is also a Research Fellow for the Institute for Studies in Race, Reconciliation, and Social Justice at the University of the Free State, as well as adjunct professor of Comparative Religion at McGill University. She has a strong publication record, with books, edited volumes, and a number of academic journal articles in her name.
Academic Reflections is published occasionally.
Inner Immensity at the Great Assembly
The universe within the Lotus Sutra
Scholarship, Stereotypes, and Spirituality
Observations from the American Academy of…
When the Light Gets In: Muslims and Jews Standing Together (If Only for an Instant)
Kinship and compassion in the face of samsara
Shaved Heads, Hijabs, and Turbans: The Quest for Sameness in a Multicultural World
Recognizing harmony in diversity
Crowded and Dusty
On awakening and realization in secular…
Sitting Karate, Sitting with Shihan
Self and non-self: glimpses of the inner vastness
Monastic Robes and Tattoos
How appearances can matter, at least to others
The Patriarchal Legacy of Maya’s Death
Transcending gender bias on the path to liberation
Everything You Need to Know About Flying Monks . . .
Brushes with the mysterious Dharma
An Ode to the Canadian Winter
Lessons on change and impermanence
Decapitated Buddhas At Borobudur
From Java to the Met: Buddhism’s artistic legacy