Ralston College’s MA in the Humanities charts its course through Western civilization, from the Greek world of Homer, to Ancient Rome and Medieval Europe, into the Renaissance and up to our modern era. The setting of our four terms parallels this arc by beginning in Greece and then moving to Savannah, Georgia. The curriculum unites the most profound and provocative works of literature, philosophy, and art, inspiring and challenging students to approach the human condition with fresh eyes. Yet to cover this ground in a single year of intense intellectual study requires careful steering and selection. For 2025–26, that focus will be provided by the theme of “Fellowship,” which our multidisciplinary curriculum will trace through philosophy, music, architecture, art, and literature.
A rich tapestry of connections—biological, economic, ecological, affective, metaphysical, and spiritual—bind together the disparate elements of our world and allow for the emergence of a multitude of associations from the domestic to the civic, from the intimacy of friendship to the vast interdependencies of nations, from systems of commerce to the ecosystems of rainforests and oceans, and from the quiet communion of the individual with the transcendent to the boisterous unison of voices in song. In all these situations, we realize ourselves in and through our relations to one another and to the cosmos itself. Yet such connections are necessarily fragile and must be carefully cultivated and maintained; where they have been severed, they must be re-established. To study the theme of “Fellowship” is thus to study not only the rich relationality of all things, but also the conditions that allow for the survival of those relationships—namely, the practices of reconciliation, recovery, and repair. Moreover, it is to acknowledge those events—from births to marriages to foundings—that bring new relationships into being.