Alumni Stories: Steve Mayer ’72

I had no idea I would study or major in religion before taking a survey course to fulfill distributive requirements my freshman year. My only previous exposure was the requisite Sunday school and Bar Mitzvah training. To this day, I feel the need to explain to people that it wasn't preparation to become a rabbi! But it did expose me to the thinking of Kierkegaard, Sartre and Spinoza, to the quest for the historical Jesus and the contrast between Purusha and Prakriti in Hinduism. I had some inspiring professors and found it to be an exciting field of study. It opened my mind to a lot of the world, including philosophy, anthropology, art history and literature. At the time, there was a lot of experimenting with Eastern religions; it gave me a deeper understanding and appreciation for our own Western traditions. I hit the job market in 1973 in the midst of our first oil embargo-induced recession. I found myself in San Francisco and eventually landed a job in business-to-business publishing. For the past 35 years I've been publishing magazines for the restaurant industry. It has nothing to do with religion per se, but I credit my Dartmouth education with teaching me to think broadly and critically about the world and to communicate clearly, which helps in any and every endeavor.

Steven Mayer ‘72

Written by

Marcia Welsh