Teaching is not only about sharing books that you enjoy, it consists in showing the literary qualities of a work, how it produces effects and emotions, how it conveys a particular vision. The goal is not to say “I like” or “I dislike”, but to understand the books, to obtain a cultural knowledge, to reflect upon one’s self, to form critical thinking, to discover new values, beliefs, sensations… new worlds, so that literature is a treasure, not always easy to find and appreciate; it’s not simply for fun, it’s not an escape without relation with your own reality. If you understand a work, especially if this is a hard one, you finally like it, because it demanded efforts to see and recognize its literary qualities. You may very well teach authors whose conceptions are far from your sensibility, but are important in the history of literature. Classic means always modern, always interesting, always questioning your actual world. That doesn’t mean that all the ancient authors are classic; some lose their interest with the decades and the centuries. One of your tasks as a (future) teacher is to contribute, along with critics, academics, writers, to the evaluation of what is good to read nowadays and what responds to the above-mentioned purposes.