Humanities at Hertog - Hertog Foundation

For students seeking an enriching academic experience over winter break, our Humanities at Hertog program offers four online seminars, each centered around an enduring literary work.

You can expect small classes of 10-15 peers who love great texts, big ideas, and lively conversation. Together, led by a master teacher, students will plumb classic and contemporary literary works for the insights they offer into fundamental human questions.

Applicants may apply for their choice of seminar. All seminars meet via Zoom, and are scheduled in the afternoon, evenings, and weekends to allow students from across time zones to come together. Fellows will receive a stipend contingent upon participation in their course and completion of a brief response paper and evaluation. All course materials will be provided.

A Hertog Conversation on Renewing Humanistic Inquiry

Browse the Courses

Shakespeare’s Henry V

Explore Shakespeare’s insights into the exercise of power.

Dostoevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov

Meditate on Dostoevsky’s final – and greatest – novel.

Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart & No Longer at Ease

Reflect on two great novels from the father of modern African literature.

Tom Wolfe’s The Bonfire of the Vanities

Read Tom Wolfe’s devastating, irresistible satire of urban and racial politics.

Past Courses

Dostoevsky’s Demons

Study Dostoevsky's great novel on the nature, logic, and social origins of revolutionary politics.

Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels

Revisit the quarrel between "the ancients and the moderns" and reflect on human nature with Swift's Gulliver's Travels.

Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man

Study this monumental work on race, identity, and citizenship in America.

Saul Bellow’s Ravelstein

Reflect on a novel rich with themes of politics, philosophy, religion, love, friendship, and death.

Deadlines & Eligibility

 

Who Should Apply? Undergraduates, gap-year students, young professionals, and graduate students are all eligible to apply. Fellows may apply for, and participate in, multiple seminars.

Dates & Times: All seminars will meet online via Zoom at a set date and time over January 2022. See the individual course pages for full details.

Stipend & Course Materials: Fellows will receive a small stipend contingent upon participation in their course and completion of a brief response paper and evaluation. All course materials will be provided.

Deadline: The application deadline is Wednesday, December 1, 2021. Admission decisions will be made on a rolling basis so apply now!

APPLICATION MATERIALS

  1. A CV OR RÉSUMÉ

  2. PERSONAL STATEMENT

    Please provide a brief account (approximately 500 words) of your interest in your selected seminars.

  3. A COLLEGE TRANSCRIPT

    Unofficial; required only for current undergraduates & recent graduates.

  4. WRITING SAMPLE

    10 pages maximum; double-spaced. Please send academic writing that best showcases your ability to invent and sustain a persuasive argument, no matter the subject-matter.

  5. ACADEMIC OR PROFESSIONAL REFERENCE

    Provide the name and contact information of a professor, mentor, or supervisor.