COM LIT 19
Fiat Lux Freshman Seminars: Short Works of Franz Kafka, or How Modern World Works
Description: Seminar, one hour. Discussion of and critical thinking about topics of current intellectual importance, taught by faculty members in their areas of expertise and illuminating many paths of discovery at UCLA. P/NP grading.
Units: 1.0
Units: 1.0
Most Helpful Review
Fall 2022 - It has been a year, and I finally realized I never reviewed this class. In a way, I think I can better contextualize my thoughts now that I have taken many more classes at UCLA. As far as a literature seminar, it's very self-explanatory. We sat in a circle and discussed for 50 minutes once a week. The Kafka stories were interesting, and we even got to write our own as the final assignment. If I'm being honest, I did not love this class very much. It is highly dependent on the enthusiasm of the students because of the seminar nature, but Professor Komar was not very good at facilitating discussion. She just lacked the ability to guide students toward their own answers by asking thought provoking questions. I brought up a point with another student and she kind of shut us down. I'm not sure if she was uncomfortable with the subject matter or just didn't have anything to add, but it rubbed me the wrong way. If you really like Kafka, I don't see why you necessarily shouldn't take this class, but I was a little disappointed with the approach to the readings and discussion.
Fall 2022 - It has been a year, and I finally realized I never reviewed this class. In a way, I think I can better contextualize my thoughts now that I have taken many more classes at UCLA. As far as a literature seminar, it's very self-explanatory. We sat in a circle and discussed for 50 minutes once a week. The Kafka stories were interesting, and we even got to write our own as the final assignment. If I'm being honest, I did not love this class very much. It is highly dependent on the enthusiasm of the students because of the seminar nature, but Professor Komar was not very good at facilitating discussion. She just lacked the ability to guide students toward their own answers by asking thought provoking questions. I brought up a point with another student and she kind of shut us down. I'm not sure if she was uncomfortable with the subject matter or just didn't have anything to add, but it rubbed me the wrong way. If you really like Kafka, I don't see why you necessarily shouldn't take this class, but I was a little disappointed with the approach to the readings and discussion.